Royal Marine Reacts To The Fallen of World War II

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 04. 2021
  • HERE WE GO! The Fallen of World War II... This was heart breaking. I really struggled to comprehend the magnitude of this...
    The Fallen of World War II: • The Fallen of World Wa...
    [ OriginalAdventures VLOG! ]=======================
    / @originaladventures2728
    / original_adventures
    ==============================================
    [ OriginalHuman Geek! ]===========================
    • Welcome To Original Hu...
    ==============================================
    ►Twitch: / originalhumangaming
    ►Military Discord: / discord
    ►Geek Discord: / discord
    ►Instagram @OriginalHuman_
    ►Twitter: @OriginalHuman_
    ►Website: LukeJillings.com
    ►Merch! teespring.com/stores/original...
    [Tactical Chin-Wag Podcast]=======================
    itunes: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
    Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/6erZjNl...
    ==============================================
    My New Chair!
    GT Omega: bit.ly/3kr07Tr
    Business inquires: originalhumanbusiness@gmail.com
    I officially have a PO Box!
    Luke Jillings
    PO Box 3522,
    Portland,
    Maine. .
    .
    MY EQUIPMENT:
    Camera: amzn.to/3W9dL37
    Lights: amzn.to/3JtLflf
    Key Board: amzn.to/3JpPWwx
    Headphones: amzn.to/3JrF15x
    Mouse: amzn.to/49P81ij
    Monitors: amzn.to/4aLd1FP
    Mic: amzn.to/3U7XWXY
    Audio mixer: amzn.to/4b2FJSr
    StreamDeck: amzn.to/4b4lHH1
    Favorite Books:
    Norse Mythology: Neil Gaiman
    amzn.to/4b24Ftc
    The Way of Kings: Brandon Sanderson
    amzn.to/3JyHIlu
    Breath: James Nestor
    amzn.to/3Jur9Y7
    We Are Nature: Ray Mears
    amzn.to/3JurhXB
    The Last Kingdom: Bernard Cornwell
    amzn.to/3w4JjN0
  • Hry

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @alhazred2825
    @alhazred2825 Před 3 lety +1713

    One of my great-grandfather went missing in Stalingrad, and the another one went through Stalingrad and the Japanese front. We in Russia say that there is not a single family in which no one died during the WW2. That is why our generation must live in peace and prevent the past from repeating itself.
    P.S. From Russia with love.

    • @h1tsc4n40
      @h1tsc4n40 Před 3 lety +151

      Russia well and truly took the brunt of it.
      It's absurd. You lost almost an entire generation to the war. It's just hard to even imagine.

    • @alhazred2825
      @alhazred2825 Před 3 lety +167

      @@h1tsc4n40 80% of Soviet males born in 1923 died in WW2.

    • @h1tsc4n40
      @h1tsc4n40 Před 3 lety +10

      @@alhazred2825 yeah and it is absurd

    • @Shiftry87
      @Shiftry87 Před 3 lety +60

      @@alhazred2825 80% is an absurd number in itself but then u look at the size of the Soviet union at the time and it becomes even worse.

    • @eligable
      @eligable Před 3 lety +3

      Bruh my family was okay rip

  • @enyasteelxai6066
    @enyasteelxai6066 Před 2 lety +702

    In Soviet Union there was such term as fatherless generation

    • @eliarevalo
      @eliarevalo Před 2 lety +22

      This is why Russians are so thick skinned.

    • @alexanderguryanov7451
      @alexanderguryanov7451 Před 2 lety +46

      @@eliarevalo It's because of our being sick skinned that it was possible for us to sacrifice millions in order to beat the enemies.

    • @tumppu1975
      @tumppu1975 Před 2 lety +7

      There is no soviet union. In sovjet rusha, though....

    • @j.j.4150
      @j.j.4150 Před 2 lety +4

      @@alexanderguryanov7451 Losing 10 times the amount of soldiers as the enemy did is a big victory to be proud of?

    • @maxxxon516
      @maxxxon516 Před 2 lety +83

      @@j.j.4150 If it were not for these sacrifices that we made for the sake of victory, the Germans would simply exterminate our people and it would be 1000 times worse than losing so many people. The Germans planned to exterminate us all, and if it weren't for the Soviet soldiers, they would have done it not only in all of Europe, but all over the world. Yes, these sacrifices are worth what we are living now. I live only thanks to my Great-Grandfather.

  • @killerbee7347
    @killerbee7347 Před 3 lety +647

    The Soviet union pretty much lost an entire generation to the war

    • @TheGirard62
      @TheGirard62 Před 3 lety +58

      80% of those born in 1921 died if my memory is good

    • @f4llen1759
      @f4llen1759 Před 3 lety +1

      Makmaren?

    • @jonasbrock3959
      @jonasbrock3959 Před 3 lety +13

      not just the soviets, the germans too

    • @connecting754
      @connecting754 Před 3 lety +6

      every life was important in that time and sadly they live so short.

    • @rat2316
      @rat2316 Před 3 lety +9

      @@jonasbrock3959 nazi hot equal to human. They monsters

  • @loudthings
    @loudthings Před 3 lety +602

    Greets from Russia. My grandfather has survived WW2. Yes, I heard some stories. About escape from German captivity, losing his friends, sniper fights in a woods, blowing up an German train. But one story I remember the most. When he laid on the ground with badly injured leg, watched february cold sky, and think that this his last minutes. I still not sure how it feels like. But luckily, he was found by nurse, and in the end he was saved. Man, I miss him.

    • @imperiallord1460
      @imperiallord1460 Před 3 lety +32

      Sad to hear about your lost but its a good thing that his storys will not be forgotten

    • @elusive6119
      @elusive6119 Před 3 lety +13

      My great-grandfather was buried alive in the Prokhorovsky field under his upturned cannon, in a crater from a large shell. They dug him up only two days later, but he was still alive.

    • @G59forlife.
      @G59forlife. Před 3 lety +9

      If I remember correctly being captured by the Germans meant death. (at least during the time of Operstion Barborosaa or however you spell it) the germans were hanging men there too, (ethnic wiping I think its called) so not beneath them

    • @imperiallord1460
      @imperiallord1460 Před 3 lety +12

      @@G59forlife. no men/soldiers were send back to Germany to be use as slave labour in force labour camps not sure about women or kids and what happened to them but probably killed by German death squad (just reread your comment and they probably did hang soldiers and civilians that they saw as subhuman)

    • @G59forlife.
      @G59forlife. Před 3 lety +2

      @@imperiallord1460 oh. Well thanks for correcting me ( Really :) ) but yeah you'd still like to evade capture more than the regular soldier if that makes sense
      I also reread YOUR comment (lol) but yeah I agree still just some may have been considered more valuable

  • @madmanmania7171
    @madmanmania7171 Před 3 lety +632

    My Filipino great grandfather fought in WWII and his small mountain camp was mistakenly bombarded by the Americans. He received a purple heart and my grandfather told me he always laughed telling his story of being bombarded by his own allies. Anyway, we all aspire to even have half the courage of those who fought in this war. RIP

    • @anevilgoose1034
      @anevilgoose1034 Před 3 lety +46

      As the old saying goes: "friendly fire.... Isn't"

    • @ganjabandit5074
      @ganjabandit5074 Před 3 lety +46

      Glad he wasn’t too broken up about it, love from the US, you guys helped out plenty with the Asian theatre.

    • @sd501st5
      @sd501st5 Před 3 lety +17

      @@anevilgoose1034 Friendly fire has the right of way... >_>

    • @kadenthoreson9915
      @kadenthoreson9915 Před 3 lety +18

      That instantly reminded me of the soldier in WW2 who became famous for getting captured put in a POW camp getting bombed and nearly killed by his own Allies, escaping, getting captured again then almost getting killed by his own Allies again, and he spent most of the war getting captured almost killed by his own Allies and escaping just to be captured again lol.

    • @cipher6207
      @cipher6207 Před 3 lety +3

      I'm half Filipino and my grand father and his friend fought in the WW2, there weren't exactly military they were sort of a militia my mother said that my grandfather's friend was a sniper and that he would tell stories to them (my mom and her siblings) .They unfortunately died before I was born (they died of old age btw and not because of the war) I wish I could have met them. 'rest in peace'

  • @mybedissoft
    @mybedissoft Před 3 lety +270

    It’s so damn hard not to get overwhelmed with emotion when seeing that photo of the German Soldier taking aim at that Mother holding her child, it’s absolutely horrid.

    • @mybedissoft
      @mybedissoft Před 3 lety +15

      @Mason Hargrave I mean when it comes down to it, it doesn’t matter what Country’s Soldiers commit such atrocities, it still makes me feel the same way regardless. I’d also genuinely like to know how you know that because that seems kinda hit or miss to me man, there’s absolutely no way to distinguish wether this specific photo is of a German Soldier or a Yugoslavia Soldier during WWII without doing extensive research about such a thing considering they both used practically the same kit when they were collaborating with the Axis during WWII.
      So if you really do know something about this specific photo that nobody else seems to be aware of, please share because I always enjoy learning something new & I’ve no problem correcting myself on the matter if so.

    • @callumkristofer7793
      @callumkristofer7793 Před 3 lety +2

      @Mason Hargrave Well?

    • @mybedissoft
      @mybedissoft Před 3 lety +16

      @Mason Hargrave here’s what I found..
      it’s referred to as the Ivanhorod Einsatzgruppen photograph, said to be depicting an Einsatzgruppen(which were SS paramilitary death squads) executing Jews near the town of Ivanhorod, Ukraine in 1942.
      It says that a Polish Postal Official Jerzy Tomaszewski who was also working with the Resistance intercepted a letter in Warsaw that had been sent by a German soldier to his family & inside was the photograph(which is a kinda screwed up photo to send to your family but that’s beside the point) so I think it’s safe to say the soldier in the photo is most likely German.
      Either way, it’s still horrid.

    • @luishorvath8443
      @luishorvath8443 Před 3 lety +3

      Well, whats with the US and british bombers which dropped phosphorbombs on citys and killed many civilians who had to do nothing with the war?

    • @luishorvath8443
      @luishorvath8443 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, its cruel. The sad thing is, sometimes their own families got killed, if they did not do that. Sad times...

  • @derrickowen8162
    @derrickowen8162 Před 2 lety +140

    The USSR losses are the most heartbreaking of this video. How it just keeps going and going up out of the screen chokes me up each time. The worst part is they suffered casualties from both sides.

    • @xnovisx4123
      @xnovisx4123 Před 2 lety +8

      ¨World War II losses of the Soviet Union from all related causes were about 27,000,000 both civilian and military, although exact figures are disputed. A figure of 20 million was considered official during the Soviet era.¨
      That's what google says. Imagine a strip 3 times as long. Heartbraking...
      Greetings from the Netherlands

    • @questionableargumentations1364
      @questionableargumentations1364 Před 2 lety +4

      It's. Not. Russian. Losses. You. Know. That. There. We're. 15 .More. Republics. Who. Were. Fighting. For. The. USSR.

    • @derrickowen8162
      @derrickowen8162 Před 2 lety +1

      @@questionableargumentations1364 I apologize for my ignorance. I have updated my original comment. Regardless though, it's staggering how few the entire rest of the world lost comparatively.

    • @derrickowen8162
      @derrickowen8162 Před 2 lety +1

      @@adrianvalentin69 Work on your reading comprehension. I said they [the USSR] suffered casualties from BOTH sides. That includes losses from Stalin's gulags.

  • @blitzfrenzy2618
    @blitzfrenzy2618 Před 3 lety +83

    When I watched the video myself for the first time, that one part, where he said that, ‘winning the war comes at a price’ and I saw the Soviet Unions count, my heart sank...

    • @ZuNk
      @ZuNk Před 3 lety +25

      Yea same happened to me.. And for americans to have the ''decency'' to say THEY themselves won the war..

    • @dallas9397
      @dallas9397 Před rokem +1

      @@ZuNk we don't. trust me, the silent majority is completely aware that the US was mainly important in the pacific war

  • @dmwalker24
    @dmwalker24 Před 3 lety +291

    If the question is, 'how were the Nazis defeated', then the answer is 'The Red Army'. Their sacrifice is almost impossible to overstate.

    • @tumppu1975
      @tumppu1975 Před 2 lety +3

      The answer is; more people were willing to die opposing them, than to die for them. Putting flags on the dead is just pointless. Also, the USSR was *not* the good guys. Just ask anyone in eastern europe. They are no better than the nazis.

    • @varunbiju6870
      @varunbiju6870 Před 2 lety +18

      @@tumppu1975 The Soviets suck but to compare them to the nazis are a bit much.

    • @varunbiju6870
      @varunbiju6870 Před 2 lety +17

      @@tumppu1975 However The Soviet Union under Stalin being
      as cruel as the nazis is way more believable.

    • @stepanserdyuk4589
      @stepanserdyuk4589 Před 2 lety +6

      The civilians losses are roughly the same number as the military, actually.

    • @dmwalker24
      @dmwalker24 Před 2 lety +3

      @@stepanserdyuk4589 Quite right, but the push into Eastern Europe and to Germany was accomplished by the military.

  • @KKKK814
    @KKKK814 Před 3 lety +88

    Hi from Russia. Almost every family member mostly man was in WW2. My grand grandfather and his brothers. My family steal have a mails from him. It’s heartbreaking. I steal remember story’s what my another grand grandfather told me.

    • @irishman3406
      @irishman3406 Před 3 lety +19

      @@MaxKingsley72 He's Russian dude, give him a break.

    • @baburik
      @baburik Před 2 lety +1

      @@MaxKingsley72 a friendly reminder that he doesn't need to speak your language. not well. not at all. yet he cares to do so well enough in order for the information to come through. if you have a problem with his English not being perfect - it's your problem and you can stick it right where it belongs alongside with your reminder "ma man".

    • @xnovisx4123
      @xnovisx4123 Před 2 lety +2

      @@MaxKingsley72 He doesn't have to learn English. Just a friendly tip - if you want to teach someone something, at least take the trouble to write it in their native language, otherwise you look like regular shit.

  • @nes.k.2523
    @nes.k.2523 Před 3 lety +80

    80% of German army was fighting on the Eastern Front, that's why the numbers were so huge compared to other fronts.

    • @joket4445
      @joket4445 Před 3 lety +13

      Yes. First, they received excellent training in Europe, a victorious war with minimal resistance. And an army already trained in battles came to the USSR, and that means a lot.

    • @shukvirgrewal6968
      @shukvirgrewal6968 Před 2 lety

      True

    • @shukvirgrewal6968
      @shukvirgrewal6968 Před 2 lety

      If the soviet union had not sacrficed that many people they may have lost. that is why they lost 50% more soldiers than germany.

    • @user-ir3fc7kv7h
      @user-ir3fc7kv7h Před 2 lety +4

      @@shukvirgrewal6968 if the Soviet Union had not sacrificed so many people, then the whole world would now remember Hitler as its only god and would celebrate his birthday every year.

    • @user-yi4pt1um9u
      @user-yi4pt1um9u Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@joket4445ничего подобного, не было подготовлнных солдат, что за чушь вы несёте. Германия напала внезапно, пока не объявили о нападение. На войну шли все мужчины, женщины, дети, и никто не был подготовлен. Учите историю. С любовью из России. 🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺

  • @datmufn
    @datmufn Před 3 lety +131

    My grandfather fought in ww2 and drove a Sherman something he did was he took huge bullets and hid them places for his wife to find. What a mad lad.

    • @Ocrilat
      @Ocrilat Před 3 lety +3

      My Great Uncle was a Sherman tank commander in Patton's 3rd Army. Small world.

    • @pun-eo5hm
      @pun-eo5hm Před 2 lety +1

      you mean tank shell?

  • @bensharp802
    @bensharp802 Před 3 lety +323

    I’m sorry I never knew the death that Russian took on, I knew they played a big part in the west but those number are insane. Thank you for this video, had tears in my eyes the entire time

    • @AlexNAroundTheWorld
      @AlexNAroundTheWorld Před 3 lety +61

      Not most in the east, but a key contribution to the world victory over Nazism. The Soviet people gave freedom to the world at the cost of their blood and contributed 90% to the overall victory. But in the West they don't say that. In the west, a simple and insignificant landing operation in Normandy is considered almost an operation to save humanity. Meanwhile, millions of Germans and millions of Soviet citizens were killed under an unnamed village in Russia. For the U.S. and Britain asked to divert German troops

    • @elenanikitina5206
      @elenanikitina5206 Před 2 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/OuuthpJmAig/video.html
      czcams.com/video/01H3dq7y1Kg/video.html

    • @legokingtm9462
      @legokingtm9462 Před 2 lety +6

      @@AlexNAroundTheWorld I think he meant West as in Europe, East as in Japan china

    • @halowraith1
      @halowraith1 Před 2 lety +5

      @@AlexNAroundTheWorld you're right that the eastern front was the decisive theatre of the war, but i wouldn't call the normandy landings ''insignificant''. that's pretty nasty, actually.

    • @ilyanizhnik6874
      @ilyanizhnik6874 Před 2 lety +11

      try to understand what we feel when you guys show captain america beating hitler

  • @modtec1209
    @modtec1209 Před 3 lety +227

    Well now you know why "The Soviets helped the Allies" on your Oversimplified video bothered me a bit. The Soviet Union WON the European theater and the Allies HELPED. They recieved quite some help in form of american equipment, but talking about the millitary victory, the Soviets did the heavywork.

    • @FUCKYOUTUBEANDITSIDIOTICHANDLE
      @FUCKYOUTUBEANDITSIDIOTICHANDLE Před 2 lety +1

      @@smittyDXPS3 GTFO.

    • @praeceptor
      @praeceptor Před 2 lety +10

      They received substantial material help, including the occupation of an entire country called Iran by British and Soviet Forces, causing - ahem - (for sure totally necessary, thanks for getting our thoughts straightened, friends...) casualities among the Iranian Forces - to open a shorter supply route into the Soviet Union, the "Persian Corridor". The military operations carried the absolutely non-euphemistic names "Operation Countenance" in English and even better: Операция Согласие in Russian.
      Hell, even the kerosine for the Soviet fighter planes was produced by British-run refineries in that region.
      Stalin sacrificed an obscene amount of blood to gain a foothold at the conference tables of Jalta and Potsdam.

    • @yimpyoi9808
      @yimpyoi9808 Před 2 lety +14

      @@Nande6708 right. without american supplies the war would have been lost. without the RAF and british intelligence the war would have been lost. without the sheer numbers of the soviet union the war would have been lost. everyone played their part

    • @PappysDungeon45
      @PappysDungeon45 Před 2 lety +12

      @@yimpyoi9808 another way to look at it is Britain neutralized North Africa, America neutralized The Pacific, and Russia neutralized the East. Without each other the war would have been lost and people on both sides need to remember that.

    • @bibristik
      @bibristik Před 2 lety +6

      Дорогой друг, мы не получали ни какой помощи, мы получили оплачиваемую услугу, и не всегда лучшей техникой, даже БУ подвозили, но была и не плохая ни кто не спорит, однако, за эту услугу нам пришлось заплатить, не путай помощь и платную услугу. Так же не стоит забывать что советы еще без особых усилий освободили всю манджурию и отрезали японцев от ресурсов.!

  • @rocksjoshua
    @rocksjoshua Před 3 lety +454

    Now you know why the Russians/ Soviets laugh when we say the UK and the US won the war. It’s almost unimaginable how many people they lost to defeat Germany, not just soldiers but also civilians. Sad to even think about.

    • @michaelmckesson6997
      @michaelmckesson6997 Před 2 lety +20

      @Jayden Dan Dominquez I went and did a little math. If Russia wasn't in the war, and it was just us and Great Britain. Given our success rate in battle against Germany. The United States and Great Britain would have had to lose 4 million 500 thousand soldiers to defeat Germany. Without the Russians killing 2.3 million Germans. That is of course if we could maintain the same kill rate. Which probably not, since Germany would've had dramatically more weapons to expend on our war front instead. Stalin is butcher, but he did kill the lions share of the Germans.

    • @hypershock0762
      @hypershock0762 Před 2 lety +5

      Does it matter who “won” the war?

    • @JohnDoe-ch7ww
      @JohnDoe-ch7ww Před 2 lety +73

      @@hypershock0762 it does because Americans love to say that they won the war meanwhile the us barely had any effect on the germans

    • @mural8639
      @mural8639 Před 2 lety +5

      @@JohnDoe-ch7ww barely.... you dumb or what, if americans and brits did not open the new front soviets would be fucked cuz germany would focus on them and not defend from allies

    • @gidi3250
      @gidi3250 Před 2 lety +41

      @@mural8639 the western allies only opened a new front in western Europe because the Soviets had destroyed the central German army and cut off the northern one from retreat and was bashing the southern army rementents all the way to Berlin. Churchill and FDR where shaking in their boots in fear because the Germans could bearly halt the Soviets for more than a week. The Germans invaded with some 3 million but the Soviets destroyed about 75% of it and counter-invaded with 8.5 million men. It was believed that if the British and us didn't open a new front then the iron curtain would have been around France and not through half of Germany.

  • @grimmlight4541
    @grimmlight4541 Před 3 lety +263

    If anyone wonders how anyone can be some evil, read “ordinary men”.

    • @armadillotoe
      @armadillotoe Před 3 lety +3

      The thing is, pretty much nobody thought they were the evil ones.

    • @kuo8088
      @kuo8088 Před 3 lety +19

      @@armadillotoe no one ever thinks to themselves that they are evil and “how many innocent lives can I destroy today.“
      -
      It is when we justify acts of atrocities commit by ourselves. “We had no choice, it was us or them and I’d prefer it them.” When you see the other as less than human and therefore not worth caring about. It is then that you see the most horrifying acts of evil ever committed by a human against his fellow man.

    • @TheClassicWorld
      @TheClassicWorld Před 3 lety +1

      I commented this, as well.

    • @TheClassicWorld
      @TheClassicWorld Před 3 lety +6

      The most important thing to understand is that you don't have to be 'so evil' at all, and in thinking such, you are much more likely to actually be evil and commit such acts, directly or indirectly. You just have to be an average human, which is far scarier and more common, naturally. The book by Browning, 'Ordinary Men' shows this above all others. It follows a normal group of pre-Hitler police types, and how they became insane murders of naked pregnant women in the fields of their own free will, having been normal, decent men and police just a few years prior, with the ability to stop at any moment. Another simple example is how millions of normal Germans voted for and supported Hitler, even during war and otherwise insanity from the Nazi Party circa 1928-1940. Then you have all the Western figures and powers who were pro-Hitler/Nazi or at least did not care much at all, which included the King himself, it seems, along with much of America pre-Pearl Harbour. Not to mention the insane evil of the Japanese onto China some years prior, with the notable book being, 'The Rape of Nanking'. And keep in mind that they don't mean that in the typical sense of 'raping the land' or even 'raping women'. It was so far beyond that it's unthinkable. I literally cannot think of it, but I will tell you, at any rate. The Japanese would cut unborn babies out of the pregnant Chinese women and throw the babies into a large heap. Some other notable books in the context of the Nazis and the Communists -- and the Russian Communists may have been worse than the Nazis, by the way, with Stalin murdering millions of his own people during such battles, which helps account for why the Russian death toll was so high, with the Gulag system and endless torture and murder of innocent people, coupled with his complete rape, murder, cruelty, and destruction towards the Germans themselves, and the West -- would be the works of Solzhenitsyn, Orwell, and Arendt.

    • @monkeydog8681
      @monkeydog8681 Před 2 lety

      Dude love that book. Yeah people should read it.
      That book made me a cynic.

  • @nickg4387
    @nickg4387 Před 3 lety +356

    Man finally he reacts to this been waiting for while

    • @gravitybourk3263
      @gravitybourk3263 Před 3 lety +2

      no cap

    • @savethestick8609
      @savethestick8609 Před 3 lety +2

      just a reminder that during the mongolian conquest gengas kong billed 11% of the human population

    • @savethestick8609
      @savethestick8609 Před 3 lety +1

      killed

    • @MZ-bl6wg
      @MZ-bl6wg Před 3 lety +1

      I’ve been waiting for it too but remember he’s a military Vet, military Vets have a different perspective that civilians can’t understand , this along with the first Medal of Honor ever recorded are very visually he’d for Vets to respond to and I actually feel bad seeing them continually pushed to react for such painful familiars like this as a soldier.

    • @Ryan-mf8tz
      @Ryan-mf8tz Před 3 lety

      Er

  • @juhovuolinko6446
    @juhovuolinko6446 Před 3 lety +44

    My grandmother's brother served during the Winter war as a medic. He went missing about halfway through, never came back. Only when Finnish troops retook territory in the Continuation wars were his remains found at last, and later on his last act was recounted by his sarge to my grandma and her family.
    A couple men had been left injured between the lines, so he went out there crawling with a sled behind him - his last words to the sarge were "we gotta at least try to help our pals there." His remains were found under a lush and big spruce, with the military ID:s and clothes still on him - he must have crawled there to hide from the Russians. He lies now buried in a war heroes memorial cemetary in his home town.
    Around 2009, we found his war-time diaries, as well as those of my grandfather (who survived the wars). We had just gotten a printer and a PC, so for about a year my grandma read those diaries through (only she could read their hand writing with ease) and wrote them down on the PC in a Word file. Reading them, to this day, is truly like peering into our history - descriptions of how men had banter, the weather, the moments of action like taking out a tank with logs, sledgehammers and grenades. Those diaries are quite possibly the single most treasured heirlooms in our family, and their discovery had old relatives not heard of since 1980s contacting us once word got out, all wanting a copy.
    My grandpa, a distinguished vet who served as both an artilleryman and a medic iirc., passed away in 2004 - just 5 days short of turning 90 years old. Never smoked, drank or took substances. A long and venerated sports career in my home town, with prizes so many grandma doesn't have enough space to display them all. Up until his very last years doctors were amazed just howw good a condition he was compared to his peers. When he was buried, there were war veteran officials there - but more importantly, three of his war-time friends whose lives he had saved. Overall, I think over 100 people were there, if not 200 - in most funerals, there are about 30-40. That really hits me to this day, and even 17 years after his passing it's very much truthful to say that my grandfather is the one who forged the very core of my family, and his legacy is still a great part in holding it together.
    We must remember the sacrifices of those who took part in those wars and honour their legacy, lest we reduce their meaning to nothingness and betray all they were willing to fight and die for.

    • @vivverinerex4715
      @vivverinerex4715 Před 2 lety

      Do your fingers hurt?

    • @cani-stay-withyou3406
      @cani-stay-withyou3406 Před 10 měsíci

      Such great words from you. From one Finn to another, please thank your family for protecting our country, even if only in your mind ❤

  • @harrisonneville6764
    @harrisonneville6764 Před 3 lety +93

    You might want to check out the game “this war of mine” which is about surviving in a war torn county as civilians. There is some specific story dlc like “father’s promise” and “the last broadcast” that would probably be worth checking out.

    • @Orapac-ln5jd
      @Orapac-ln5jd Před 3 lety

      I forgot about that. I pirated it when it first came out and now ill have to check it out again.

    • @gunterthekaiser6190
      @gunterthekaiser6190 Před 3 lety +3

      Another game is throught the darkest time. Its about the first victims of the Nazis: the German themselves. Basically all the political opposition, communist, Democrats and jewish in Germany.

    • @wolframvonstein4526
      @wolframvonstein4526 Před 3 lety +6

      And please let's not forget Valiant Hearts, taking one into The Great War, which was named World War One afterwards...

    • @Docktavion
      @Docktavion Před 3 lety

      I think it took me and my friends 6 attempts to get a ‘positive’ result with the board game and I still think we ended up getting arrested for a couple years.

    • @Docktavion
      @Docktavion Před 3 lety

      @jojan jojan nope if it came down to man power, then the UK had more access to them and resources. So the UK and it’s allies would have won out in the end.

  • @mustard4762
    @mustard4762 Před 3 lety +178

    We really should show this to Aliens if they ever come to us to communicate

    • @billykapard9863
      @billykapard9863 Před 3 lety +82

      Aliens: "Surrender!"
      Humans: "We killed 70 million of our own people just 21 years after killing 15 million in another conflict for no real reason."
      Aliens: "Understandable, have a nice day."
      Honestly speaking, I think that 9 times out of 10 it is us who would scare the aliens, not the other way around.

    • @mustard4762
      @mustard4762 Před 3 lety +43

      @@billykapard9863 Aliens: W-Why would you guys do that? Is it because for revenge?
      Humans: Oh no, we just hate each other and also want some land cuz some guy fucked out economy

    • @MouldMadeMind
      @MouldMadeMind Před 3 lety +12

      After that we realy deserve the genocide award.

    • @billykapard9863
      @billykapard9863 Před 3 lety +11

      @@mustard4762 Yeah, the saddest part is that it's true.

    • @billykapard9863
      @billykapard9863 Před 3 lety +14

      @@MouldMadeMind We humans can be horribly petty. Even worse, we would likely do it again, if we didn't have WMDs to keep us in check. And I still think it's just a stopgap measure, war isn't going anywhere as long as we exist.

  • @rbwbr
    @rbwbr Před 3 lety +30

    I was literally waiting until he will see USSR casualties to see his reaction.

  • @eoftar3192
    @eoftar3192 Před 3 lety +21

    8:12
    My great-grandfather on my father's side is out there too. Lost a duel with a German sniper. My grandfather, dad's father, was helping his mother - the chief of a hospital, which was constantly relocated further and further towards Germany as the war went. He died on March 8th of this year, at the age of 92.
    My great-grandfather and my grandfather on my mother's side were both military pilots, both survived the war. Honestly, most of my relatives on my mother's side were all in some shape tied with aviation, except me and my uncle. I wanted to go there, wanted to be a pilot too but was turned down because of my heart problems, sadly I'm not destined to continue the family tradition :)
    From Russia with love, mate.

    • @peterwolf8395
      @peterwolf8395 Před 3 lety +1

      My german gramps lost aöl his 3 brother 1 to partisans he covered from the ss 2 to the ss and russian cruelty long story but lets say schock units in 1943 were not gentle if they found a german alone asleep in his barack .My gramps fougth and killed for all 6 years and in the end he had come to the conclusion that there is no evil only people no difference between soldier and soldier no heroes because all heroes are dead because they hesitated because of thier humanity in a figth .

  • @sarwenaz
    @sarwenaz Před 3 lety +35

    after this, u will start to understand the Russians...thank you so much that u save us!!! From Germany with love!!!

  • @TheMelbournelad
    @TheMelbournelad Před 3 lety +22

    6:26 “a lot of people” me: *just wait mate*

  • @charliewilmshurst5024
    @charliewilmshurst5024 Před 3 lety +34

    There’s similar to this for WW1 called “The loss of life in WW1 visualised” which is also a great one

  • @zeraith
    @zeraith Před 3 lety +18

    I feel you bro, most people have trouble grasping the amount of people that are in stadiums watching football/icehockey games when it's filled to the brim. That amount of people isn't even SCRATCHING these numbers. It is absolutely staggering to think about.
    It truly is sad to think about and I truly hope we never try to bury the past because we must learn from it.

  • @sowhat249
    @sowhat249 Před 3 lety +37

    My family was lucky during this time. My grandpa was only 11 so he couldn't participate, only had sisters and women weren't drafted and my great-grandpa was older than the draft requirement.
    But there are villages in Russia where you can still find a WW2 memorials standing with a list of people from that village who died in WW2. On many of them, you can see like a dozen people with the same second name. Those were fathers, sons, brothers, cousins.
    Can you imagine losing like 10 members of your closer family, people you know, in a few year period? Harsh times.

    • @LeonidErokhin
      @LeonidErokhin Před 3 lety +10

      Basically it is the every village in Russia and close to it countries, having these memorials. Me and my family go to one of those every year on May the 9th. And you are right - this makes you feel empty inside, devastated, even if u see it every year. Cant hold my tears every time. Nearly every family in the USSR has lost someone in that war. When i see americans talking shit like “america won war” or “we should have started another war long time ago to hold up the USSR in Europe”, i wanna punch them in face, because they dont know shit about what a war is like. Let all of it never happen again.

    • @emycharaa
      @emycharaa Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@LeonidErokhinfacts

  • @ShadowRhapsody81
    @ShadowRhapsody81 Před 3 lety +19

    "Part of our training is to go to the graveyards and memorials."
    That needs to be a thing in "all" militaries. Drive home just what it is your signing up for and just what it is your fighting for.

  • @eddiewalley4991
    @eddiewalley4991 Před 3 lety +23

    These deaths just never sink in to me because there’s just so much

  • @mesaultintensifies2491
    @mesaultintensifies2491 Před 3 lety +5

    my grandfather was in in Leningrad during siege, he was around 15 y o, i think. he told me stories , how he and his friends was scouting the roofs after bombardments, searching for failed bombs to cower it with sand, if i remember correctly. onese bomb or artillery hit his house, and he was buried under debries for about 12 hours, he lost hearing on one side after that for rest of his life. my other grand grand father served as driver on so called "road of life", one and only supplie route of Leningrad during siege, laing on ice of Ladoga lake , during winter. when the siege was broken, he and his unit went all the way to Germany. my family album has a photo of him in the vicinity of Berlin.

  • @syotos.nn8976
    @syotos.nn8976 Před 3 lety +160

    You should react to "Operation Downfall", the planned US invasion of Japan that wasn't used due to the Atomic Bombs, makes the scale of DDAY look small.

    • @lithium1770
      @lithium1770 Před 3 lety +31

      The bombs actually saved lives.

    • @Matej_Sojka
      @Matej_Sojka Před 3 lety +14

      @@lithium1770 It was not the bombs, the Japanese were prepared to resist while getting Soviets to negotiate peace for them with Allies, they surrendered the moment Soviets declared war upon them. When nukes fell, one cabinet member suggested a meeting to discuss it but others did not care. Their cities were already bombed conventionally to oblivion, the difference of hundreds of bombs per city vs one per city was irrelevant when ALL their cities were rubble already. Hiroshima and Nagasaki were left alone by US bombing as testing ground so they were the most intact population centers in Japan at the time before the nukes. You get so much noise about how nukes ended the war because western press was spinning that narrative to suppress Stalin and Japanese were not just not contradicting their conquerors, they were telling them what they wanted to hear.

    • @arthurcarpenter631
      @arthurcarpenter631 Před 3 lety +7

      I don't think it was the Soviets either, all of US high command was convinced that the Japanese would surrender by the end of the year. It's argued by a lot of historians that Truman used the bombs to demonstrate US military power to intimidate the USSR, if you're interested look up Atomic Diplomacy by Gar Alperovitz, it's an extremely interesting book.

    • @DeosPraetorian
      @DeosPraetorian Před 3 lety +5

      Well the Japanese were already thinking about surrendering before the bombs fell

    • @gokublack4211
      @gokublack4211 Před 3 lety +4

      Its dumb how everyone says usa made japan surrender, but the truth to was .. at the end of the eastern front, stalin declared war on japan, and stalin didnt want to liberate but occupy the land , so japan decided to surrender to USA cause, they trusted usa , stalin would make the emperor into his B

  • @datboidego
    @datboidego Před 3 lety +21

    When I first saw this video about WW2 I absolutely cried almost throughout the whole video. It’s just so sad what men can do to another fellow man. We have no world without them

    • @praeceptor
      @praeceptor Před 2 lety

      Same here. But I'd like to add: DO. People do this. That is our condition.

  • @egonieser
    @egonieser Před 3 lety +12

    I'm really glad he reads the comments and requests. Good lad!

  • @Jemand9
    @Jemand9 Před 3 lety +31

    And those were just the definitely confirmed deaths with the lowest possible number.

  • @VerchielxKanda
    @VerchielxKanda Před rokem +2

    Every time he says the average age is 23, it hits me so hard.
    Boys and girls practically. Dying as pawns on a chessboard.

  • @bethkrager6529
    @bethkrager6529 Před 3 lety +8

    Theres a poem by Konstantin Simonov that is worth a read. It encapsulated how the soviets could sacrifice like this.

  • @gribay01
    @gribay01 Před 3 lety +10

    Мой дед прошел всю войну, воевал и под Сталинградом и под Курском, где был тяжело ранен, воевал на батарее реактивных миномётов. Я его видел только на фотографии, он умер ещё до моего рождения, военные раны сделали своё чёрное дело. Полностью согласен с предыдущим комментарием, даже в песне поётся "Нет в России семьи такой, где б не памятен был свой герой"

    • @nileprimewastaken
      @nileprimewastaken Před rokem

      english translation for those who need it: (I got this off of google translate it might be inaccurate)
      My grandfather went through the entire war, fought both near Stalingrad and near Kursk, where he was seriously wounded, fought on a battery of rocket-propelled mortars. I saw him only in photographs, he died before I was born, war wounds did the dirty work. I completely agree with the previous comment, even in the song it is sung "There is no such family in Russia where its hero is not remembered"

  • @meebo8014
    @meebo8014 Před 2 lety +7

    I must tell you, i think he jinxed it considering the current events surrounding ukraine being invaded by russia possibly threatening nuclear war

  • @eichler721
    @eichler721 Před 3 lety

    Love that you reacted to this. It puts alot into perspective that others don't.

  • @doug4167
    @doug4167 Před 3 lety +4

    “This is gonna break my heart”, the video was just getting started and I was already getting a little emotional seconds before you said that 😂 I have such a great appreciation and respect for those who fought, served, and sacrificed.

  • @t4trouble199
    @t4trouble199 Před 3 lety +173

    You can see why Russia is insulted, when our western leaders snub Russia for WW2 memorials...

    • @theaterofsouls
      @theaterofsouls Před 2 lety +5

      facts

    • @imrekalman9044
      @imrekalman9044 Před 2 lety +9

      Or when on the 75th anniversary of a great event in WWII (D-Day) everyone is invited, including axis (Merkel of Germany, Orbán of Hungary), but not the countries who lost the most, Russia and China.

    • @kyodai14
      @kyodai14 Před 2 lety +4

      Imo I hate the red army, I’m seriously depressed that the civilians that did nothing died, but I could care less for the red army itself. They were just as bad as the Russians and I have no sympathy for their deaths. It’s the same for the Nazis, I don’t feel any sympathy for the Nazis, but I do for both Germans, and Russians, at least the ones that weren’t particularly responsible for the horrible acts in the eastern front.

    • @Maks.G
      @Maks.G Před 2 lety +1

      @@kyodai14 "Red army... They were just as bad as the Russians". Moron!

    • @kyodai14
      @kyodai14 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Maks.G that was a mistake on my part cause i was watching while typing, anyway what I mean, is I don’t hate the Russians or the Germans, I hate the USSR and Nazi Germany. And the fact that some people glorify what the Russians did disgusts me as they were just as bad as the Nazis. That’s what I meant to say lmfao.

  • @SilentButDudley
    @SilentButDudley Před 3 lety +18

    Russia’s numbers come from the massive amount of citizens who also fought. People who weren’t normal military ages (and sometimes genders) were conscripted to fight.

    • @xnovisx4123
      @xnovisx4123 Před 2 lety +8

      Because there was nothing left for them. Even children fought.

    • @alsm974
      @alsm974 Před 2 lety

      Nope. Military losses are including woman and children, who served in Red Army and joined partisans. Such a big numbers are from german atrosities, famine in Leningrad and on occupied territories and a lot of victims among more than 4 millions sivilian slaves in Germany.

  • @reddevilsunited_2060
    @reddevilsunited_2060 Před 3 lety

    I have been waiting for this reaction since the day I started following this channel. Finally it has happened.

  • @RogueRaichu
    @RogueRaichu Před 3 lety +4

    Genuinely one of my favorite videos on the internet. I feel like everyone should be shown this video at least once so they can actually get a sense of just how large World War 2 was, and how destructive it was. What our past generations went through. You just don't get the full picture just by reading a number.

  • @dennischapman8683
    @dennischapman8683 Před 3 lety +50

    Holy shit, was waiting for this

  • @danielfr5140
    @danielfr5140 Před 2 lety +4

    its crazy how under-taught the soviet contribution to WW2 is, my granny was evacuated to Siberia when the nazis invaded, maybe 5 years later her family got a book which listed every single recorded death from the soviet army during the war, the book was over 1000 pages, she still has it

  • @ggiufa7289
    @ggiufa7289 Před 3 lety +1

    Damn i remember this being requested soooo long ago. Happy to see that your doing it now

  • @squishy1624
    @squishy1624 Před 3 lety +3

    every time i see this video, or at least seeing someone react to it, it blows my mind that ALL of this actually happened. like obviously yes i know it happened, but we only see videos, pictures, graphs, etc. about this event but to actually think about it.... man... gotta be grateful about the times we live in right now

  • @XSniper2000X
    @XSniper2000X Před 3 lety +5

    I luckily had my Gran(great grandmother technically but we called her Gran) who has now passed but she told me some great stories about what she was doing during ww2 and hearing her talk about them is what gave me such love and appreciation towards history.

    • @kacper6116
      @kacper6116 Před 3 lety +1

      My great grandma survived holocaust but my great grandad died in war

  • @robertbretschneider765
    @robertbretschneider765 Před 3 lety +6

    Thanks for the reaction. As a german, i have to point out that those
    mobile killing groups and the concentration camps were special units of
    SD and SS, not the regular army. They operated behind the front lines,
    where the normal soldiers couldnt see them. And they were brainwashed
    more than the regular soldier. There were high german army officials
    that tried to kill hitler with a bomb several times. But sadly, a stone
    tableleg was between hitler and the bomb, so he survived with injuries.
    The coup was stopped fast after that, and all were sentenced to death.
    My great-grandfather was evacuated ill by plane from stalingrad and
    survived. He became a cementary gardener. My great-grandmother and
    grand-uncle as a little boy were in dresden when they firebombed the
    wooden city center. The flames filled the entire sky above him, and the
    pavements/street asphalt was burning. Some estimations say over 100.000
    died in dresden, because the city was full of refugees from east
    germany. He cant stay near fire since. He was a peace activist in
    socialist east germany fighting against the arms race until
    reunification. Their secret service did much to try and stop him, but he
    is still with us today.

  • @Moldymessiah98
    @Moldymessiah98 Před 3 lety

    I love the og video, ive shown it to a lot of people cos of how well it puts everything into perspective, for me this was especially the case with deaths in stalingrad.
    Glad you got to see it too.

  • @grimmlight4541
    @grimmlight4541 Před 3 lety

    Been waiting for you to react to this for so long.

  • @hunterandre6360
    @hunterandre6360 Před 3 lety +5

    My Great Grandfather was a USMC Raider in the Pacific fighting the Japanese at Peleliu island and Okinawa. He lived to be 97

    • @DakotaofRaptors
      @DakotaofRaptors Před 3 lety +1

      Oorah.

    • @douglaspurcell9199
      @douglaspurcell9199 Před 3 lety +3

      Hoorah. The stories I heard about Okinawa during training were basically along the lines of "there were points of the fighting where you were climbing actual mounds of bodies when you tried to move." Imagine the battle of the bastards from GoT. But I got stationed there thankfully and it's a beautiful place. With a lot of amazing people. I believe that if anyone ever harbors hatred for someone based on their nationality or anything else, they should just live around them and in their culture and they'll realize that we are all the same.

  • @markey1997
    @markey1997 Před 3 lety +23

    eastory has a fantastic videos series animated showing all the troop movements on the eastern front in ww2, he animates all the division moving including the tanks, the division markings can be a bit difficult to understand, but it gives you a much better idea of the scale of the war on the eastern front. he covers it by each year the first video is called Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1941. I imagine you have a good understanding of what divisions and cores are, so i imagine you would have a much better understanding of the video then I did, I just know the basics of divisions

  • @kylerider7125
    @kylerider7125 Před 3 lety +1

    Ww2 has always fascinated me. Watching so many people die through history gives me a little comfort knowing I will go through it

  • @neoxperson7858
    @neoxperson7858 Před 3 lety

    The thing that I love about this video the most is.. I just watched a video showing how many million people died in WW2, but the man who made the video still managed to make me smile at the end. The ending of the video is amazing.

  • @PTaylor1087
    @PTaylor1087 Před 3 lety +6

    It was a hard video for me to watch as well. Great reaction man

  • @Epicwarrior846
    @Epicwarrior846 Před 3 lety +6

    "Everyone has a story that they tell without speaking, question is, are you listening?"

  • @Happymali10
    @Happymali10 Před 3 lety +1

    My great uncle died last year in his early 90s.
    He was a child/teenager in the latter years of WW2 and was force-drafted ("Voluntold") to help in the "Volkssturm", the hopeless final defense of Berlin, bringing Ammunition to the AA-guns.
    He always said most soldiers didn't necessarily believe in the whole "superior race" stuff, certainly by 1944/45 most people knew things had gone to shit.
    People who actually believed in being superior or whatever were few and far between, even some high-ups tried to bail from the sinking ship (the Nazi Paradox, the Third Reich's Second man tried to bail first).
    There's a saying that "you know the war isn't going well when you take the subway to the front, you know it's going bad if the way home in the evening is shorter"
    Most people, both civilians and a lot of fighters really just hoped that the Americans/Allies would get to them before the Soviets, because the latter were SO FAR WORSE.
    Something I'll remember from him is saying "those who're loud are usually wrong. Ever seen a Nazi whisper?"
    He also never talked about, like...school friends or so.
    I can't be sure (didn't dig in obviously), but it could be that a lot of them died or disappeared.

  • @jakedooley4625
    @jakedooley4625 Před 3 lety +1

    My great grandfather was a B-17 ball turret gunner and a POW after he was shot down by flak. He was later liberated by General Pattons tank crews. In one of those tanks was my other grandfather who was one of the tankers to liberate the camp. Before the camp was liberated my great grandfather Field (the Ball turret gunner) was in the camps labor yard and witnessed Allied P-47s level through the camp above the trees. The next day the tanks came through to find that all of the Nazi soldiers were gone and had fled. But both were at the same place and same time and had no idea.

  • @mtfunitomega-17floridamen76

    My great grandfather was part of an American bomber crew during WW2 he survived but later died to some back related disease, although I forget what it was called.

  • @ND-vi7ob
    @ND-vi7ob Před 3 lety +4

    Hello, very good video!
    Makes you think a lot...
    Greetings from Austria

  • @coruptified7380
    @coruptified7380 Před 3 lety +1

    omg i was wanting him for him to react to this today

  • @785sasha
    @785sasha Před 3 lety +4

    It's very nice to see the reaction to the video, which I also recommended, there is another video that shows the horrors of war, it is called Battle of Moscow 1941 - Nazi Germany vs Soviet Union. These are archival footage of that time, a very revealing video.

  • @Jabokrazy
    @Jabokrazy Před 3 lety +6

    Remember he said British colonies were included, so Canada, Australia, New Zealand are all included in the death total.

  • @SpectreSpook
    @SpectreSpook Před 3 lety +2

    My great-grandpa was Mike Ranney of the Band of Brothers. The books and the series have done a wonderful job of explaining the horror of WWII. But nothing will ever convey how haunted my grandma is when she talks about him telling her the real stories.

  • @TheNismo777
    @TheNismo777 Před 3 lety

    Nice reaction! I really hope we can maintain the peace!

  • @Feuer69
    @Feuer69 Před 3 lety +35

    I've Never been so fast

  • @niekro3136
    @niekro3136 Před 3 lety +4

    You should try watching videos from Memoirs of war. They document war stories from old veterans :)

  • @monolithranger2950
    @monolithranger2950 Před 3 lety +1

    My Great Uncle was in the Signal Corps of the 29th Infantry Division which landed on Omaha. Since he was in the Signal Corps, he was in the 3rd wave, so most of the beachhead was taken before he got there. His wave was there with the support troops and such, picking up the pieces, getting things organized. He only ever talked about it once. He talked about how the beach, and the water was just so red. As if someone had painted the sand. There was just so many dead and wounded, and you had to work fast, cause the waves would come up and drag people into the sea.

  • @SpiritOfNet
    @SpiritOfNet Před 3 lety +1

    There are no family in post Soviet Union, who not suffered from WW2(for us war 1941-1945 called "Great Patriotic War"). Both of my grandfathers were there. One was in infantry and second was a pilot. Whole WW2 situation is terrific, but I hope that thanks to this video at least some of people will understand why do we celebrating May 9th. Personal for me - it's not a celebration day. This is memorial day for all, who not survived and suffered in this war on the Eastern front. Here is a short story about my grandfather Ivan(father's dad), who gave me most part of education.
    "Lt. Ivan Kostyukov, being a commander of a 2nd rifleman squad, during fulfillment of a command task “to take a height on a road to Leningrad”, took a command of company, when company commander and deputy company commander went out of service.
    Whole company was stuck under pressure fire during their movement. Realizing that "they’re 600 meters away from a waypoint" he gave a command to his light machine gunner “to suppress the enemy's machine gun fire 200-250 meters in front”. One of his light machine gunners was injured, the second one was killed In progress. Lt. Kostyukov took a light machine gun, suppressed the enemies’ firing point and destroyed up to 25 nazists. By these actions he provided an opportunity to keep going for the whole 1st battalion.
    On the same day, during the same battle Lt. Kostyukov with his company attacked the enemy fortified point and captured 2 heavy machine guns, 4 light machine guns and eliminated up to 40 nazists. In this battle Lt. Kostyukov eliminated 8 nazists by his own submachine gun.
    Lt. Kostyukov and his company faced heavy machine gun fire moving 300 meters forward attacking way. Lt. was injured by expansive machine gun round in a left shoulder. Despite that injury Lt. Kostyukov has stayed at the battlefield until he gave command role to indirect fire squad leader Lt. Diachenko, and was sent to the hospital by deputy regiment commander Maj. Ilyin."
    And my grandfather never told about this. For him it was all-personal. And May 9th was a day when he recalled his fallen comrades. Since then this day is more sacred.

  • @Darth_Nycta_13
    @Darth_Nycta_13 Před 3 lety +7

    once you dehumanise someone you can do literally anything to them as they're "beneath" you and that is what is scary. Because all humans are capable of that. You don't see them as people anymore you see them is "lower", "inferior" or "other". Also some of them had to be sociopaths too.

    • @armadillotoe
      @armadillotoe Před 3 lety +1

      Like the left cancelling conservative now?

    • @Darth_Nycta_13
      @Darth_Nycta_13 Před 3 lety +3

      @@armadillotoe to some extent yeah. But let's not forget that conservatives did it to anyone who they deemed "sinful" or subhuman as well. not a justification for the bs that is "progressive" politics just saying that both sides have their extremes. I mean there are still beople who say LGNTQ+ and a other ethnic groups as lesser than them . But I do get that the culture favours progressives on most issues. (well more what makes them the most £££ $$$)

    • @worldoftancraft
      @worldoftancraft Před 3 lety +3

      Dehumanization is the main way of propaganda along all sides in a war. Also, accordingly to the military position about the question, the a-bombs been dropped to "military" objects.

  • @randomgunenthusiast9026
    @randomgunenthusiast9026 Před 3 lety +28

    Was just thinking yesterday how long it would be until you reacted to this 🤣

  • @davide.s.9880
    @davide.s.9880 Před 2 lety

    My mom's two brothers were in WW2 . One landed on Normandy and fought in most big battles in Europe till the end. The other was a sailor on a new ship that every time it left port to go into battle it had to retune because it broke down. So he never fought in any battles in WW2. But both returned at the end of the war.

  • @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
    @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t Před 3 lety +2

    I used to have a neighbour who was German, who was from a town that's like right on the border with the Czech Republic. She was about 16 in 1945, and could hear the Russian artillery when she crossed the Elbe, a few days before the Red Army actually got boots on the ground there. It took her almost 50 years to track down the surviving members of her family.

  • @boffinboy100
    @boffinboy100 Před 3 lety +8

    Re the Soviets - this is why I find the Eastern war more interesting because the sheer level of brutality and death toll is so high to a point hardly anyone outside the East understands.
    I remember a statistic that if you were to form all the dead from the Red Army into Battalion formations (~200) like the modern V day parade, and have them march across Red Sq at the standard pace of 120steps/min non stop it would take 2-3 days.

    • @magni5648
      @magni5648 Před 3 lety +4

      I'm from Germany and I know a perfect example visualizing it. I grew up in a small rural municipality in southern Bavaria. Our local church had a memorial wall for all locals who died in both world wars, with place of death noted. The WWII section it's like two and half rows of names with all kinds of locations across Europe, and even two U-boat names and crazily enough, one crewmember of the Bismarck.
      And then the location part just reads "Russia" and it's row after row after row.

    • @boffinboy100
      @boffinboy100 Před 3 lety

      That is a pretty good example - even on the 'small' scale of a local village/town

    • @user-db1iz3fw8m
      @user-db1iz3fw8m Před 3 lety +1

      Well, it was bad

  • @kallumfrybrookes2618
    @kallumfrybrookes2618 Před 3 lety +10

    Psychiatrists say that everyone has it in them to commit acts like in the Holocaust. But most of us aren't given the Opportunity (Thank God).
    Im sure when these German soldiers started their killing it made them lose sleep at night, they would have regular breakdowns. But as years went on they became used to it. And some even started to like it.

  • @ronluk76
    @ronluk76 Před 2 lety

    Hey man, thanks for doing this. Great video reaction. I am fan of your channel. I like your videos. War sucks!!! A friend of mine who was a US Marine was killed in Iraq a few years ago and right now is nerve racking watching how things are disintegrating in Afghanjstan at this very moment and wondering whdee this is going to lead to!

  • @stephsdlnthms3957
    @stephsdlnthms3957 Před 3 lety

    If you ever get the chance, go to visit a state veteran's home and sit with the guys there. I was lucky enough to work in such a facility for several years, and I got to meet some of the kindest, most humble, and most incredible people in the world - a whole lot whom were WWII and Korean era veterans. And I guarantee the guys there would love to talk with a Royal Marine veteran :)

  • @FonVegen
    @FonVegen Před 3 lety +6

    I am from Germany, and at least one of my great-grandfathers was among the casualties. My grandmother told me how he went away to war, and one day an officer rang on their door and informed his family that he would not return home. There are stories of somebody else in the family, but not one of my direct ancestors, who had to walk back home from a Soviet labour camp. It's safe to say that for a *lot* of reasons we are very much against war now.
    There are also some more pleasant stories from American and British soldiers being kind to the children that my grandparents were back then, but this is probably not the place for those.

    • @user-ht8li9lu9v
      @user-ht8li9lu9v Před 2 lety +2

      "которым пришлось возвращаться домой из советского трудового лагеря пешком" - но они вернулись, не так ли? А миллионы советских солдат не вернулись, так же миллионы мирных жителей, которых убили на своей же земле. Не пощадили ни детей, ни женщин, ни стариков.

  • @dvco99
    @dvco99 Před 2 lety +6

    My grandfather was one of those who fought in Russia (German). He said that it was the worst battle of all in which he took part. The Russians fought the way others did not. He doesn't like to talk about it and he is still wary of the Russian people.
    Greetings from Germany. Forgive us.

    • @serinoneko8485
      @serinoneko8485 Před 2 lety +2

      I am Russian and we were told that our soldiers fought without fear because they had nothing to lose. Their homes are destroyed, their families are killed, they are ruled only by pure anger.

  • @missously2088
    @missously2088 Před 3 lety +1

    my grandfather fought in the pacific and european theaters, I wish i had the chance to talk to him about it before he passed away.

  • @screwistic
    @screwistic Před 3 lety +1

    On the interactive version the time of showing the seconds of the long peace acctually shows the exact time and date you are watching it to the second.

  • @surges12
    @surges12 Před 3 lety +13

    I was saying on the discord that he shouldn’t have watched this because it was far too depressing and might take a toll on his mentality. Props for actually doing it regardless

  • @KanoSJ
    @KanoSJ Před 3 lety +6

    Noti gang. What’s even more horrifying is that the allies only discovered concentration camps after the war right? So it was kept a secret from the world for so long

    • @MouldMadeMind
      @MouldMadeMind Před 3 lety

      More in the end.

    • @billlbilsontonling7773
      @billlbilsontonling7773 Před 3 lety +3

      They were discovered when the Russians captured Poland from the germans

    • @RocketSurgn_
      @RocketSurgn_ Před 3 lety +5

      From what I’ve seen, there were rumors and the allies certainly knew something like them existed, but they had little idea of the scale or degree of the horrific conditions.

    • @Zabijaka87
      @Zabijaka87 Před 3 lety +5

      @@billlbilsontonling7773 Poles were reporting those camps to allies way before but were ignored. And "capture" is a perfect word. Literally it was just a change of d.cks that were f.cking Poland in the a.ss.

    • @asneakychicken322
      @asneakychicken322 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Zabijaka87 they unfortunately have a lot of experience in that, before the 20th Century they had comparatively barely any time during which they were independent, mostly falling within one empire or another.

  • @RocketSurgn_
    @RocketSurgn_ Před 3 lety

    This is some of the best data visualization I’ve seen, and data vis is something that matters a lot in my work (not so much making it as using and nothing like the talented work here). It’s so hard to make huge numbers like this sink in, humans just aren’t good at really comprehending numbers like that. The individual stories like he mentioned are easier to connect with but the way the totals are shown here has so much more weight than usual. Hard to get emotion from charts and graphs.

  • @ladydais
    @ladydais Před 2 lety

    My maternal grandfather fought in the Pacific durning the Second World War. He was there in Okinawa and lost so many of his friends and brothers and arms. He passed away in 2011 but I would remember the story’s he would tell me about his Army days.

  • @bradenvalentine1775
    @bradenvalentine1775 Před 3 lety +13

    Fitting that the man in charge of the country that took the most causalties is responsible for the quote "One death is a tragedy, a million is a statistic."

    • @angrybanana5476
      @angrybanana5476 Před 3 lety +2

      I mean he was a huge asshole but this is one of the few things he was right about

    • @Lelik_208
      @Lelik_208 Před 3 lety +4

      Erich Maria Remarque?
      It's quote from «Der schwarze Obelisk» 1956.

    • @user-db1iz3fw8m
      @user-db1iz3fw8m Před 3 lety

      Thats so false and so made up, but yeah u know better pony land historian. Henry Ford was an asshole and a nazi.

    • @bradenvalentine1775
      @bradenvalentine1775 Před 3 lety +1

      @@user-db1iz3fw8m I feel like that's a pretty aggressive reply for something couldve simply been "thats actually incorrect"...
      Also, someones already point out the quote's origin isn't necessarily from Stalin. (And it seems like the actual origin is kind of vague, from a taking a quite search for similar phrases.)
      Also, not really sure where Ford comes into it? Do agree that he was an asshole though.

    • @worldoftancraft
      @worldoftancraft Před 3 lety

      @@bradenvalentine1775 It is very easy to do criticizing, and by that, i mean: "clear blackwashing", of a lion, when you're a dwarf and the lion is already no more. Pure practicist, a man of practice, became to be an ordinary mad man, despite willing of whose the war bee won. What fascinating stories i hear nowadays.

  • @erwinrommel4229
    @erwinrommel4229 Před 3 lety +33

    "How can you be so evil?"
    It's easy, it's just human nature.

    • @NilasJunkyard
      @NilasJunkyard Před 3 lety +6

      We can be evil, but its not normal human behavior. We are social animals.
      Imagine two worlds. World A and World B. And in both worlds a traffic accident occurs on the street.
      The people in world A are selfish and cruel. Their first impuls is to rob the vehicle and leave the driver to die after.
      The people in world B are helpful and kind. They'll break into the car to save the drivers life and call an ambulance.
      In which world do we live in?

    • @erwinrommel4229
      @erwinrommel4229 Před 3 lety +5

      @@NilasJunkyard that varies from person to person

    • @NilasJunkyard
      @NilasJunkyard Před 3 lety +1

      @@erwinrommel4229 It can't vary, because there is only one world we live in.
      People are not born evil, or born in world A and suddenly appear in World B. Sure, there are sociopaths, but as I said, their behavior is not natural.

    • @erwinrommel4229
      @erwinrommel4229 Před 3 lety +4

      @@NilasJunkyard your confusing me, are you a priest or pacifist or something

    • @NilasJunkyard
      @NilasJunkyard Před 3 lety +1

      @@erwinrommel4229 I am a sibling, an artist, a thinker, a teacher, a student, a lover, a friend and a nobody. Who are you?

  • @M4nh4TTN
    @M4nh4TTN Před 3 lety

    my great-grandfather fought in WW2 at the begining for germany cause im german but the cruelty got to him quite quickly so he deserted to australia helping refugees im a proud of the decicion he made to help the right people. A WW2 SA combatknife to this day remains in our family...its a knife he took from an SA soldier he killed to protect innocent civilians. this knife he took should be a reminder to us that showing courage and makeing the right decicions to stand up for those who cant on theyr own from this day forward is an important part of our family. im proud to be part of this family and proud to tell that even back in those dark times, even if it was rare to see, kindness still existed

  • @TheDrunkenPhaeron
    @TheDrunkenPhaeron Před 3 lety

    I would highly recommend watching Memoirs of World War 2, even if it's not for a reaction video. It was a project started to interview surviving soldiers about what they saw and did, some of them are still haunted and some seem like it was a highlight of their life but all are very powerful. They have started to branch out to other service members too like a German soldier and I believe they returned a Japanese flag to a family. All in all it is a great project and they need more attention and support!

  • @mobiushelldoctor1423
    @mobiushelldoctor1423 Před 3 lety +4

    10:33 I highly recommend you watching Hitler Oversimplified, a bit of hindsight can always be useful

  • @ayushkhandelwal3020
    @ayushkhandelwal3020 Před 2 lety +3

    6:12 Britain was way larger at that time

  • @jasonklein4376
    @jasonklein4376 Před 3 lety +2

    I spent some time at the Majdanek concentration camp some time ago. There is a giant pile of human ashes that is several dozen feet in diameter that is just a fraction of the people who were killed at the camp. That camp makes up 1.5 rows of the listed deaths...just...wow...

  • @randomsandwichian
    @randomsandwichian Před 3 lety +1

    You're probably the only other ex-military service gamer on CZcams after Welshknight (Hermitcraft member) I've seen. Thank you for your service.

  • @callmeengine1983
    @callmeengine1983 Před 3 lety +3

    Please do The attack of the dead men by simple history im begging you

  • @GabeTheGrump
    @GabeTheGrump Před 3 lety +19

    "I don't understand how someone could be so evil" Just wait until you learn about Josef Mengele Aka The Angel of Death

    • @LibeliumDragonfly
      @LibeliumDragonfly Před 3 lety +11

      At least Mengele is well known, Ishii Shiro is not only not talked about, but got immunity deal right after the war from the US in exchange for his "findings"

    • @TheClassicWorld
      @TheClassicWorld Před 3 lety +2

      Or the Nazi women. I recall one Nazi wife collected Jewish skin. I will repeat that. Collected Jewish skin. She often made lampshades out of them or put them up on the wall as she, quote, 'liked the way the Jewish skin looked'. She was way more mentally ill and evil than Hitler, and that's saying something. A number of Nazis were far worse than Hitler in this regard, and the same is true for the Japanese and Russians, of course.

    • @jshjnsn1723
      @jshjnsn1723 Před 3 lety +2

      Or maybe something about hiroshima ? The us killed so many civilians just for test ... remember "i dont understand how someone could be so evil" ...

    • @dantefiore8442
      @dantefiore8442 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jshjnsn1723 If the US invaded Japan an estimated extra 1 million people would have died on BOTH sides. The nuclear bombs' were horrible, but a conventional war would have destroyed Japan and killed millions more than if the bombs didn't fall

    • @veyolaski4324
      @veyolaski4324 Před 3 lety

      @@dantefiore8442 and add that if operation downfall had been commenced, more people would die.... The japanese civilians were prepared to force the US forces out of their land by any means, even if it means sacrificing themselves for their "emperor"

  • @MarkArandjus
    @MarkArandjus Před 3 lety +1

    Absolutely agree with the last message. If you know anyone born in the 30's or sooner - talk to them while you still can!
    I had a grandfather born in 1922, died in 2015. He was born in Slovenia to practical serfdom in a world with no electricity or cars, Fought in WW2, escaped the bombing of Dresden, and died owning a house as a cyborg (he had an artificial heart). Yugoslavia, the Cold war, Berlin wall, or analog computers all came and went in his lifetime. The last 100 years were kind of insane in how much the world changed. Life was so much harder back then, my grandparents all have horror stories from their childhood and find people who want to 'return back to simpler times' ridiculous, seeing how they struggled so hard to escape those conditions.

  • @dworniak24
    @dworniak24 Před 2 lety

    My grandfather used to serve under general Anders during Italian campain. He died in 2001 when I was 4... I would love to ask him so many questions

  • @hyperowsky997
    @hyperowsky997 Před 3 lety +4

    Me and all the viewers waiting for rdr2 be like:
    ...