Posted on 02/01/2015 4:24:13 AM PST by Homer_J_Simpson
Interesting photos, in a really icky way!
This can happen when access to information is as tightly controlled as it is in totalitarian societies.
I'm sure the German radio and print media was blaring statements such as, The situation in the East is difficult but we still hold territory in Poland, Lithuania, France, Italy, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Netherlands, Denmark and Norway. Be strong and hold fast! The Fuher's wonder weapons will soon arrive to decisively turn the tide of battle!
LOL! She mentioned the promise of the “wonder weapons.” The nickname in German was “WuWa,” and it became a synonym for idiotic blather, like, “BlahBlah.”
It’s a terrific book. The author is the youngest daughter, born after her father’s death. They all made it to Maine, somehow (I haven’t read that part yet) and all the children grew up to be very successful. The mother lived to be nearly 90.
Folke Bernadotte "In the closing days of the war, Count Folke Bernadotte, vice-president of the Swedish Red Cross, used his diplomatic skill to rescue Jews from the clutches of the Nazis.
His negotiating efforts saved the lives of 423 Danish Jews imprisoned at Theresienstadt, Czechoslovakia.
In a daring wartime operation, the Jews were not only rescued from death but delivered by a convoy of buses to safety in Denmark.
"To save Jewish lives, Bernadotte met several times with Heinrich Himmler.
While Bernadotte negotiated to save Jews from slaughter, Himmler used them as a bargaining chip in his quest to conclude a separate peace with the Western Allies, a ploy the Allies would firmly reject.
Bernadotte's negotiations with Himmler resulted in freedom for some 14,000 women imprisoned in the Ravensbrück, Germany, concentration camp.
The women were transferred to Denmark, then to Sweden."
"After their epic victory over German forces at the Battle of Stalingrad in the winter of 1942-43, the Soviets moved steadily westward until capturing Berlin on May 2, 1945.
Following the Normandy invasion on June 6, 1944, the Western Allies unleashed more than two million troops, who pushed eastward over the next 11 months."
"Soviet soldiers trample a Nazi flag as they march westward early in 1945. Under such skilled leaders as Marshals Konstantin K. Rokossovky and Ivan S. Konev, the Soviet Army swept from one victory to another.
In spite of sometimes ferocious German resistance, the Soviets captured Warsaw and Gdansk in Poland as they pushed toward their ultimate goal of crossing the Oder River to capture Berlin."
I get the sense that the photographer is standing atop a hill overlooking the highway, quite a steep one, which is why he chose that as his vantage-point, and that the tree is rooted a good way up that hill. Otherwise it would be difficult to account for its leafless trunk so high above the highway.
saintly relics,
churches:
and religious icons
Very well stated. It also seems that Hitler was attempting to substitute himself as a figure of worship—it’s hard to see the fanatical mass rallies like in Nuremburg as anything else. Mass “Sieg Heil” in unison!
From Atkinsons The Guns at Last Light
As the chiefs convened again on Thursday afternoon, February 1, Marshall asked the room be cleared of all subordinate officers and note-takers. No sooner had Brooke taken his chair, than Marshall bored in. Why were the British so worried about the influence of Bradley and Patton had on Eisenhower? What about Roosevelts influence? Did the British think that was pernicious too? The president practically never sees General Eisenhower, and never writes to him. That is at my advice because he is an Allied commander, Marshall said, eyebrows knot and voice rising to a wrathful timbre. In fact, the British chiefs could not be nearly as much worried as the American chiefs of staff are about the immediate pressures of Mr. Churchill on General Eisenhower. The prime minister never hesitates to hector the supreme commander directly, day or night, circumventing the Combined Chiefs. I think your worries,: Marshall declared, are on the wrong foot.
He had not finished. Should the British succeed in interposing a ground commander between the supreme commander and his three army group commanders, Marshall intended to resign or so he had told Eisenhower. Montgomery was behind much of this pother, Marshall charged; despite being given practically everything he asked for. Including the U.S. Ninth Army, he plainly craved complete command. If truth be told, Montgomery was an over-cautious commander who wants everything: an impudent and disloyal subordinate who treated all American officers with open contempt.
A stunned silence followed this tirade. After the war, Brooke would write: Marshall clearly understood nothing of strategy and could not even argue out the relative merits of various alternatives. Being unable to judge for himself he trusted and backed Ike, and felt it his duty to guard him from interference. But Admiral Cunningham, the first sea lord, later observed that Marshalls complaint was not unjustified.
For now, American indignation carried the day. Brooke fell silent, the chiefs promptly agreed to endorse SHAEFs mast plan, and the last great internecine tempest of the war subsided. For another month, the British conspired to replace Tedder as deputy supreme commander with Harold Alexander, whom they considered more pliant despite Brookes dismissal of him as a very small man [who] cannot see big. Eisenhower, braced by Marshall, advised London that if Alexander should arrive at SHAEF from Italy, he would find few military duties to occupy him. Spaatz would succeed Tedder as senior airman in the west, and there would be no question whatsoever of placing between me and my army group commanders any intermediary headquarters.
Few could doubt that the Americans now had the whip hand. The P.M. was sore, Kay Summersby jotted in her diary, but E said he would get over it.
Fascinating glimpse behind the curtain. Thanks for posting it.
Classic British understatement.
Montgomery was behind much of this pother, Marshall charged; despite being given practically everything he asked for. Including the U.S. Ninth Army, he plainly craved complete command. If truth be told, Montgomery was an over-cautious commander who wants everything: an impudent and disloyal subordinate who treated all American officers with open contempt.
Classic British arrogance.
The serene look on the ladies of that day.
Much rarer today. How I miss that.
Communism, as reflected in their edifices, is basically the worship of man and the tyrannical rule of man, like Nazism, Marxism, and Fabian Socialism.
They were often smiling, too, instead of looking both stupid and annoyed.
"To save Jewish lives, Bernadotte met several times with Heinrich Himmler. While Bernadotte negotiated to save Jews from slaughter, Himmler used them as a bargaining chip in his quest to conclude a separate peace with the Western Allies, a ploy the Allies would firmly reject. Bernadotte's negotiations with Himmler resulted in freedom for some 14,000 women imprisoned in the Ravensbrück, Germany, concentration camp.
Would like to see Steven Spielberg to a movie on that, like he did with Schindler's List.
The worship of man which unmasked is really a worship and relinquishing of power to Satan.
Looks like more and continuing Monty issues? What gave rise to this crisis meeting this time? Seems like there are more SHAEF meetings about how to handle the British than how to defeat the Nazis.
Yes. God’s plan for girls and ladies leaves them happy and serene, howbeit there is a price to pay for it.
Today’s annoyed and stern looks say something about the results of girls and ladies going the wrong way.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.