THE WORLD WAR TWO GROUP discussion
Resource Sites for Members


No, I just look at the free stuff.

http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_vault/...
It reminds me of all the research I did for Under False Flags: A Novel (pardon the plug). Not overdoing it was tough! One glossary I remember consulting was: FUBAR F***ed Up Beyond All Recognition


http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_vault/......"
FUBAR was still used often in my Navy days. So was BOHICA.

The five greatest Air Battles in History
http://nationalinterest.org/feature/f...
A couple I would say are up a little high (view spoiler) , but I thought it was well thought out

The five greatest Air Battles in History
http://nationalinterest.org/feature/f......"
I agree with you, Happy.

http://www.azcentral.com/story/life/a...

http://www.azcentral.com/story/life/a......"
Nice article. Thanks, Happy!

http://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembr...
For the Second World War there are videos about:
Canada Remembers: Holland (22 min. 14 sec.)
Sacrifice, Achievement and Legacy: Canadians and the Second World War 1939-1945 [22 min. 09 sec.)
Canada Remembers the Far East (24 min. 24 sec.)
There are also some shorter titles under the heading of "Heroes Remember Presents"
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Geevee, Assisting Moderator British & Commonwealth Forces
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http://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembr......"
Thanks Bev - ones for me to watch :) By the way if you use the search in the top right corner of the group's pages and enter Canada you'll find we mention it and you guys a lot.

Rare footage of US MPs executing German commandos caught impersonating American soldiers during the Battle of the Bulge (warning: graphic):
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/656...
Haunting color footage of destroyed Munich in May 1945:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idiJe...
Both of which play a role in my novels, by the way—pardon the plug.
Overall, Critical Past is a great resource for raw video from the period:
http://www.criticalpast.com

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/idea...

Anyone ever read about this fake Nazi invasion map? I never read a word until today.

Anyone ever read about this fake Nazi invasion map? I never read a word until today."
First I ever heard of it.

Anyone ever read about this fake Nazi invasion map? I never read a word until today."
First I ever heard of it."
If I remember correctly, Time or Life magazine published an article showing how Germany and Japan would invade the United States.


The originals are in the National Archives in the UK.

Thanks, Chin Joo. Excellent maps!
message 379:
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Geevee, Assisting Moderator British & Commonwealth Forces
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Thanks Chin Joo, as the other guys have said great maps.

Transcript of a recording by Lieutenant Colonel R G Wells, on the construction of radio equipment whilst in a Japanese Prisoner of War camp after the fall of Singapore.
http://bizarrelabs.com/foxhole.htm
Foxhole radios, are radios that require no battery & which allowed service men & even prisoners of war to utilise available materials to build a working radio receiver.
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Geevee, Assisting Moderator British & Commonwealth Forces
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The Razor blades are still available from companies who supply crystal radio bits & pieces.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/04/wor...

Reminded me of this I found recently. I don't know if this has been posted before but this link will get you to a lecture delivered by Eugene Sledge titled "The Costs of War" (May 1994). He wrote "With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa".
http://youtu.be/WCIJfM_CgWo

http://histru.bournemouth.ac.uk/CHiDE...

http://facingstalingrad.com/


http://facingstalingrad.com/
[bookco..."
Fascinating website AR. I love the "Blind Swap" in the interview of Anatoly Grigoryevich Merezhko .

http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/dhh-d...
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Geevee, Assisting Moderator British & Commonwealth Forces
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http://pattonthirdarmy.com/pattonbook...


A fun fellow who provides a friendly swagger to his Patton. He was 'performing' at last years Camp Mabry-Austin (Texas 36th Infantry home) Memorial Day event last year and I imagine he'll be here this year.

...the triumph in World War II was a collective, democratic and unifying event, the likes of which we never experienced before... The triumph was not the property of any group, region or class; the victory was national. It belonged to everyone. One of the war’s great emotional appeals, I think, is this emphasis on communal responsibility, obligation and reward.
I think the proper word for that "communal responsibility" is patriotism.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinion...

Not that he's wrong about the victory of such notions. Centralized power reached its zenith in the victors, especially the United States, shortly after the war.
This being Goodreads and not my other blog, I'll refer to a couple literary examples. In Ian Fleming's Goldfinger and Diamonds are Forever post-war state control of behind-the-scenes institutions is laid out quite matter-of-factly, as if it was perfectly normal.
Goldfinger
Diamonds Are Forever

Not that he's wrong about the victory of such not..."
I gather you don't see "communal responsibility" as a manifestation of patriotism and an example of civic virtue? What else is it? How do societies achieve successes, such as victory in WW II, if they don't work together for a common goal? It's not just a post-war notion. Aristotle's Politics supports the concept as did the Romans. You may disagree with Samuelson, but it's unfair to describe his view as "obscene."
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