I love it.
Ok, the cartoon about the D-Day Invasion raises a question from me. Of course I wasn't here then but was the Times Terrorist this bad back then as well?
I'm still waiting for charges to be filed.
Great thread!
Great toons.
It can't be easy for these guys to stick- it to the people who sign their paychecks... Many thanks.
I hope Muslims don't go on a global jihad over this. We all know what happens when one of their icons is lampooned in cartoons.
I liked the Saturday Night Live sketch in the first gulf war, where the reporters were asking questions like, "What are our greatest areas of vulnerability, and how could the enemy best exploit them?"
2006 Q3 FReepathon. Target: $68,000 | Receipts & Pledges to-date: $3,497 | |||
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("What if" in History - No. 6) Aug. 1, 1944: NEW YORK TIMES breaks story of family hiding from Nazis
DFU "what if" in history | Aug. 1, 1944 | Jonathon Risen
Posted on 12/29/2005 9:52:55 PM PST by doug from upland
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The NEW YORK TIMES has learned exclusively of an amazing story about a Jewish family that has been hiding from the Nazis in an annex of rooms above a business in Amsterdam.
Otto Frank, a German businessman, became fearful for his family when Adolph Hitler came to power in 1933. In the summer of 1933, Frank left Frankfurt for Amsterdam, in the Netherlands, to set up a business called the Dutch Opekta Company. Less than a year later, he was joined by his wife Edith and their daughters, Margot and Anne.
By the mid-1930s, the Franks had settled into a normal routine. They developed a circle of friends who were both Jewish and non-Jewish, the girls attended school, and they took family vacations. Otto expanded his business in 1938, going into partnership with a merchant, Hermann van Pels, who was also a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany.
The belief that Amsterdam was a safe haven from the Nazis was shattered when the Germans invaded the Netherlands in May of 1940. For a short time, Anne and Margot continued to attend school and socialize with their friends. In May 1942, all Jews aged six and older were required to wear a yellow Star of David on their clothes to set them apart from non-Jews. After summer recess in 1941, the girls were no longer allowed to attend schools with non-Jews.
Under the Nazi administration, Jews were required to register their businesses, and later they were forced to surrender them to non-Jews. Otto Frank had anticipated the decree and had already turned his business over to non-Jewish colleagues Victor Kugler and Johannes Kleiman.
By 1942, Jews were being arrested and forced into German labor camps. The Frank family was fearful for their lives and planned to go into hiding. They had already chosen the place -- an annex of rooms above Otto Frank's office at 263 Prinsengracht in Amsterdam. People on the office staff had agreed to help them.
Margo received a call-up notice on July 5, 1942. That meant that she would soon be deported to a Nazi work camp, so the family knew they had to go into hiding immediately. They left notes indicating that they had left the country.
The family entered the hiding place on July 6. On July 13, the van Pels family joins the Franks. Then on November 16, 1942, the seven residents of the Secret Annex were joined by an eighth and final resident, Fritz Pfeffer.
The group has been extremely careful not to be seen or heard, knowing that the Nazis would arrest them if they are discovered. They have been hiding for two years. Anne has been keeping a diary of the family's struggle to stay together and not be taken by the Nazis.
We at the TIMES hope that the Franks, the van Pels, and Pfeffer are not discovered in their hiding place at 263 Prinsengracht in Amsterdam. It must be a terrifying existence. After the war, perhaps we can turn Anne's diary into a book. It certainly is a wonderful human interest story of a teenage girl.
We expect to have further reports from the Amsterdam hiding place over the next several months and to bring you an exclusive interview with the courageous young Anne Frank.
Count on the NEW YORK TIMES for all your war coverage. If it's news, we will have it first.
What seems to be lost on the people who claim that these leaks aren't treasonous is the fact that foreign security services are now fully conginzant of the fact that the US simply can't keep any secrets. This is going to lead to a major hit on our intelligence agencies being able to get information from the intelligence agencies of other countries.
During WWI, the Germans were able to adjust their artillery fire by reading the French newspapers. The NY Slimes (and the rest of the MSM in general) is carrying on the tradition.
Mark
Don't forget Joe Kennedy sided with Hitler. His son never fell far from the Speakeasy.
Pray for W and Our Troops
Nice boxes with “X”s in them. Cool.