WW2 Oversimplified REACTION

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
  • Sorry it's a day late everyone! It's been a busy week!
    Once again, Oversimplified helping me realise just how little I know about history haha Hope you enjoy the video!
    Original video -- • WW2 - OverSimplified (...
    Feel free to follow me on Instagram! / alice.in.gingerland

Komentáře • 515

  • @josephsink9994
    @josephsink9994 Před 2 lety +234

    Yeah, the official response was "Nuts" and it actually confused the Germans enough where they didn't attack for hours

    • @kassandratorres1463
      @kassandratorres1463 Před 2 lety +4

      Really?

    • @philipcoggins9512
      @philipcoggins9512 Před 2 lety +35

      @@kassandratorres1463 No, after their initial confusion, the Germans asked General McAuliffe to clarify what he meant, to which the commander of the 327th Glider Infantry told them "Go to hell!" At the point the German officers that were at the meeting left. The Germans began their attack shortly after the two hour period that was in the original message ended.

    • @ShadowMoon878
      @ShadowMoon878 Před 2 lety +11

      It was history's very first "Deez Nutz" joke

    • @dakker5292
      @dakker5292 Před rokem +4

      What I heard is that Gen. McAuliffe was busy directing many things for Bastogne's defense when someone came up to him with the German's demand for surrender and he said 'aw, nuts' as in 'something else to deal with', and they said 'no really, you need to send a response', and they then decided to go with the 'NUTS' as the response.

  • @xSTRYKERx243
    @xSTRYKERx243 Před 2 lety +534

    As an American I can say I wasn't offended at all, jokes are jokes, everyone just needs to calm down a little lol

    • @denniscampbell4272
      @denniscampbell4272 Před 2 lety +37

      'Murican here too. I remember my reaction being "I know, right?", but props to Alice for owning and acknowledging that it could have offended. Thumbs up!

    • @lashedsuns4529
      @lashedsuns4529 Před 2 lety +18

      I second this --
      In fact, if I recall correctly, I laughed at her throwaway comment. Because, y'know, if the shoe fits... xD

    • @megadev9099
      @megadev9099 Před 2 lety +5

      Exactly!

    • @dalorianangulo6586
      @dalorianangulo6586 Před 2 lety +4

      Agreed. Say what you want.

    • @casonhuffman4466
      @casonhuffman4466 Před 2 lety +25

      Texan here. Making fun of Americans for war mongering is totally justified and can be very funny.
      Ricky Gervais makes a great point. People need to stop saying "that's offensive" and rather say "I find that offensive". What offends one person makes another fall out of their chair laughing.

  • @colinfraser7150
    @colinfraser7150 Před 2 lety +247

    As an American I wasn't remotely offended, it wasn't necessarily incorrect.

    • @jas1007
      @jas1007 Před 2 lety +19

      Same. Some people just dont want to hear national criticism.

    • @chrisbovington9607
      @chrisbovington9607 Před 2 lety

      If an American is "offended" by an "alien" implying that USA is a warmongering nation, maybe they should direct that unease into a little historical study.

    • @ericbadertscher6978
      @ericbadertscher6978 Před 2 lety +11

      EXACTLY, as a southern American, do not apologize for a joke. Especially one as mild as that.

    • @sledgehammerk35
      @sledgehammerk35 Před 2 lety +11

      definitely not incorrect... most Americans are honestly tired of being involved in overseas conflicts.

    • @TheLegoMaster261
      @TheLegoMaster261 Před 2 lety

      @@jas1007 If an American gave criticisms to another country, I guarantee you wouldn’t stand for that and you hurl insults at all Americans. So cut the crap and just admit that you hate America

  • @solbringer2483
    @solbringer2483 Před 2 lety +205

    As an unoffended American I felt I must speak. Nothing you have said has offended me, and I am certain I share my opinion with the majority. For every person who has voiced an offense, understand there are hundreds of us who believe your views are completely reasonable. I implore you to take the vocal minority with an extreme grain of salt.

    • @gafgarian
      @gafgarian Před 2 lety +12

      Facts. That “offended” guy was quite the snowflake 😏 shocker…

    • @metallicdragon3614
      @metallicdragon3614 Před 2 lety +3

      I'm suddenly feel like I'm standing at attention during a speech of a military officer lol

    • @solbringer2483
      @solbringer2483 Před 2 lety +3

      @@metallicdragon3614 lol, is it that obvious?

    • @cedric182
      @cedric182 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Commented within the first minute of the video to make sure your views are heard lol 🤡

    • @locutus9956
      @locutus9956 Před 18 dny

      Too f'in right. Ignore the whiny 'snowflake' crowd out there and dont let them make you feel bad for having a goddamn sense of humour ;) (and frankly it wasnt even an innacurate observation and any folks who think otherwise are living in cloud cukoo land)

  • @spacebar1111
    @spacebar1111 Před 2 lety +29

    ‘The fallen of ww2’ would be an amazing follow up on this. It’s pretty popular among reacters and for good reason.

  • @sledgehammerk35
    @sledgehammerk35 Před 2 lety +17

    The sad thing is, if the atomic bombs weren’t dropped, the casualties from both sides in an invasion would be absolutely staggering. So many Purple Hearts (a decoration given to wounded U.S. Servicemen) were made in preparation for the invasion, that the very same batch from WWII are still being awarded to wounded U.S. Servicemen to this day. Because the Japanese surrendered after the bombs, it also spared them from a potential Soviet invasion and occupation. It’s just incredibly tragic that this even became necessary.

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 Před 2 lety +5

      Yep. The dropping of the atomic bombs was a tragedy, the best situation would have been for Japan to surrender when it was clear they were beaten. But since they didn't, the US took the least bad course of action that was left to them. The A-bombs killed around 225,000 people. A land invasions likely would have killed millions.

    • @wesleypeters4112
      @wesleypeters4112 Před 2 lety +1

      The US was also thinking about just blockading the island and starving the Japanese as one of three options.

    • @johnnyb8412
      @johnnyb8412 Před 7 měsíci

      WW3 losses will hit the Billion mark due to nukes, what annoys me most is even after a nuclear world war all the idiots who caused it will be safe and sound in thier bunkers😡

  • @IceMaverick13
    @IceMaverick13 Před 2 lety +124

    The height thing with the Japanese emperor *does* have something to do with it, in this case actually.
    Basically less than 1 generation before World War One, the Samurai still existed in Japan and the samurai spirit was alive and well. The concept of Bushido - the moral and ethical code that true warriors were meant to follow - had regained a *lot* of popularity just before the 1900s. A lot of the western nations involvement with China (The Opium Wars) and their economic exploitation of Japan bred a lot of hyper-nationalism in the Japanese people to be especially anti-western.
    Part of the revival of Bushido and the very tight interconnection into all aspects of their society was the idea that the Japanese people, being an honorable race of true-warriors who followed this strict code, were of course superior to all other peoples. And the only person who could lead such a noble, invincible race of people would be somebody who has ascended to ranks of the divine. While the Japanese concept of gods is less absolute than the western Christian God, they still believed that their leader was a divine God-Emperor as the hyper-nationalism swept across the military.
    The printing of the photo of McArthur standing next to the emperor was a big wake-up call for a lot of the Japanese people. Widespread media coverage was nothing like it was today. There were plenty of people who had never even seen their emperor, and if they did, it was almost always in pictures with other similarly-heighted Japanese people, often bowing or prostrating before him. Seeing photographic evidence that the emperor wasn't literally larger-than-life and was just a mortal man - much less a man who was both smaller and less muscular than one of the so-called Inferior Races - really shocked the general public.
    The society of the time placed him on a pedestal of expectations, so seeing him brought back down to Earth and convincing the Japanese people that they were just following a man like any other was one of the key points of breaking their society away from their hyper-nationalism and getting the country back to running peacefully instead of turning into a hellscape of resistance fighters trying to put the "true ruler of Japan" back in power.
    Nowadays, the idea of him being shorter than somebody making front-page news seems a little silly, but if you believed your country's leader was a god, wouldn't you feel blown away to find out that your god doesn't tower over every person he meets and is instead a solid foot-and-a-half shorter than most people in the world?

    • @Aliceingingerland
      @Aliceingingerland  Před 2 lety +34

      Ahh right! Man I learn even more in the comment section hahaha thanks for that, good to know! 👏🏼

    • @Northbravo
      @Northbravo Před 2 lety +8

      Also to be fair McArthur was a fucking Chad

    • @edixonvc5101
      @edixonvc5101 Před 2 lety +9

      @@Northbravo he was literally consider a shogun, being called the gaijin shogun of Japan during the U.S occupation

    • @alphalycan_roc55
      @alphalycan_roc55 Před rokem

      @@Aliceingingerland I didn’t know if you would see my comment. So I am doing this. Every time you have a drink of water in your videos, or at least one time, say the phrase “Hydrate or Die”. Credit of the phrase goes to MandJTV on CZcams.

    • @Navybrat64
      @Navybrat64 Před 11 měsíci

      That's very well put and makes perfect sense. I agree.

  • @jamesgiles4517
    @jamesgiles4517 Před 2 lety +52

    If you want to know more about the death count I recommend watching fallen of ww2. It breaks down the numbers pretty well
    I do still recommend watching more of oversimplifieds videos

  • @lo_ma_cel3079
    @lo_ma_cel3079 Před 2 lety +14

    Just a small thing I wanted to share after hearing the story of your grandfather.
    Like the 18year old in that story, my grandfather was conscripted during WW2. He was 15 and two months away from his 16th birthday when it happened in November 1944. There are so many stories I heard from him.
    Just to give you an idea:
    About friends(the same age as him) he saw dying, him escaping from being a POW twice, the time he was behind enemy lines and the only food they got, was a calf they got gifted from a farmer. All of the 5 boys didnt know how to slaughter it without the calf going wild or drawing attention through making noise. They went 2 days without food until they could trade it.
    The sudden ptsd he had when hearing someone say "please identify yourself" from behind at the airport, when he visited the US for the first time. He of course was drawn back to his memories from being captured by American soldiers.
    I feel honored to have heard his story and being able to tell future generations what war means. Seeing him react to the current war in Ukraine just breaks my heart. He hoped that the world had learned its lesson about war...
    The main point I wanted to make is there are no true victors in war.
    I(23yo therefore the same age as the average soldier who died in this war) can't imagine pulling the trigger on someone, yet walking up to the body and discovering I just shot a 15 year old kid...
    Nor can I imagine being forced to fight at an age where my main worries were school, videogames and how I do in my footballmatch on Sunday.

    • @Aliceingingerland
      @Aliceingingerland  Před 2 lety +5

      Awww man absolutely heart breaking 😭😭 glad he made it through to tell the tale, but wars something no one should have to go through 😭 thank you for sharing ❤️

  • @helge9047
    @helge9047 Před 2 lety +33

    I recommend you ww1 from epic history where the first world war is explained in more detail. And just as interesting are ww2 footage and the fallen of ww2 is also very good. Would be very interesting to see a reaction to this

  • @amoral_minority
    @amoral_minority Před 2 lety +67

    It's nice that you don't want to offend anyone, but imo no government should be immune to criticism, that's how we get today's Russia (I am Russian) and WW2 Germany.
    So if there are people who are offended when you mention all the messed up stuff their country did in the past, that is their problem.
    As long as the joke is based in fact and not spreading misinformation about its subject, it's all good.

    • @user-ux7xs6vr2n
      @user-ux7xs6vr2n Před 2 lety

      Nazi pig from Ukraine - stop writing everywhere that you are Russian.

    • @shadeblz8425
      @shadeblz8425 Před 2 lety

      Ага, давай критиковать Россию за экспансию НАТО

    • @moviebad109
      @moviebad109 Před 2 lety

      @@shadeblz8425 the fact that countries surrounding russia want to join for protection from the Russian aggression is definitely NATO’s fault. Lol
      It’s all a huge conspiracy and definitely not the typical behavior of nation states on the borders of aggressive nations historically.

    • @shadeblz8425
      @shadeblz8425 Před 2 lety

      @@moviebad109 the fact that NATO still exists after collapse of the USSR and keep expanding to the east since then is definitely Russia's fault. Lol
      Learn some history before typing me

  • @David-id6jw
    @David-id6jw Před 2 lety +16

    re: Hiroshima pronunciation - You are pronouncing it the way an English speaking person would pronounce the word (emphasizing the first and third syllables), but it's not the way it's pronounced in Japanese (which generally avoids syllable stresses like that). On the other hand, while the video narrator is using more correct syllable stresses, he's also mispronouncing it. The 'o' is pronounced as 'oh', not 'ah'.

    • @Aliceingingerland
      @Aliceingingerland  Před 2 lety +1

      The more you know! I’m editing I was like, Alice. Should have mentioned that obviously there might be different pronunciations haha thank you for clarify!

  • @xsithspawnx
    @xsithspawnx Před 2 lety +37

    I appreciate that you care about your audience and felt the need to apologize, but I'll just add myself to the list of Americans who straight up laughed when you made the joke. Our government has gotten up to some shady and/or morally questionable stuff and acknowledging that isn't offensive. Keep doing what you're doing! ;)

  • @HarmonyShoal
    @HarmonyShoal Před 2 lety +2

    Your videos have an old school authentic youtube vibe to them which I really enjoy. You seem genuine and down to earth which makes it really difficult to not like you.

  • @Serryy
    @Serryy Před 2 lety +2

    France falling so quickly in WW2 is one of the reasons why the French surrendering is a meme.

  • @cheekychunks6952
    @cheekychunks6952 Před 2 lety +7

    I'm never offended but appreciate the time taken to point it out I support you keep it up

  • @Cloudyedits86
    @Cloudyedits86 Před 2 lety +6

    To put into scale how much money Germany owed, they finished paying reparations in 2010

    • @tanjimmy125
      @tanjimmy125 Před 2 lety +1

      And that were only the reparations for WW1 as far as I'm aware.

  • @89sponge
    @89sponge Před 2 lety +10

    21:30
    According to modern data, the demographic losses of the USSR amounted to 27 million people.
    Military losses of the USSR amount to 11,444,100 people,
    of which 8,668,400 soldiers were killed
    (6,818,300 soldiers died in battles, hospitals and other accidents, and 1,850,100 people did not return from captivity),
    civilian losses in the occupation zone - 13,684,700 people
    (of which: intentionally exterminated - 7,420,400 people, died in forced labor in Germany - 2,164,300 people, died of hunger, disease and lack of medical care - 4,100,000 people).
    ///
    P.S.This list does not include large, but difficult to calculate, civilian casualties from enemy combat in frontline areas, besieged and besieged cities.
    For example, 658,000 people died during the siege of Leningrad. During the bombing of Stalingrad - more than 40,000 people.
    Tens of thousands of people died from the bombing of Sevastopol, Odessa, Kerch, Novorossiysk, Smolensk, Tula, Kharkov, Minsk and Murmansk.
    ///
    P.P.S.Over time, for various reasons (the long lack of access to primary sources, the fundamental absence of primary sources on German losses separately for the Eastern Front in 1945, the obvious ideological and political interest of various parties.), there was a large variation in the final numbers. In state publications, estimates of losses from the USSR ranged from 7 to 42.7 million people. Later, other figures appeared in the journalism.

  • @XplosivCookie
    @XplosivCookie Před 2 lety +15

    "We'd all be speaking German now" is the most nauseating thing Americans keep saying to everyone else who fought in the world wars, I recoiled hearing you say it too. That hero complex is exactly why so many of them have an idea that they could do no wrong, and the healthy way of looking at their accomplishments would be to recognize equally the mistakes, the heroics, and the evils they have been responsible for.

    • @JJaqn05
      @JJaqn05 Před 2 lety

      American propaganda is disgusting

    • @boombalatty2161
      @boombalatty2161 Před 2 lety +5

      I also hate that, I am American and would never say that because we were only there for a year and Europeans took most of the casualties. But I also hate it when people say “we didn’t need Americans” because the ones that gave their Life deserve the credit they deserve, no matter the country.

    • @yomama629
      @yomama629 Před 2 lety

      As a Frenchman I have to say they're right though, as it was the Americans and British who did the vast majority of the fighting to liberate my country. It's also thanks to the US that Western Europe maintained its status as an economic powerhouse and became a region of democratic nations; had the Soviet Union singlehandedly defeated Germany (which I very much doubt they could have done) then they would have occupied all of Western Europe as well and we would have become a collection of underdeveloped Soviet satellite shitholes instead

    • @citymorgue8462
      @citymorgue8462 Před 2 lety +1

      @@boombalatty2161 What they did need was American supplies

    • @xviper2k
      @xviper2k Před 2 lety +2

      The other major players of the war were being heavily supplied by Americans the whole time, so they can stay nauseated if it bothers them that much.

  • @SungJaeUng3
    @SungJaeUng3 Před 2 lety +32

    Alice, there is something that maybe isn't super well known in other countries, but in America the "history" people were taught in schools is practically an american fanfiction version of what actually happened. Someone being offended at your comment is probably someone that has never had anyone challenge their conception of american history. A major event in US history is the Boston Massacre. Every US history textbook mentions it as one of the key incidents that kicked off thr revolutionary war. What isn't mentioned is that the "massacre" was started by a british soldier's gun going off after he had been hit in the head with a rock. In that "massacre", it resulted in 5 colonists being killed, and the whole thing was an accident.
    So, what I'm saying here is you should keep commenting how you perceive things. Your viewpoint might challenge someone's misconceptions, and result in them actually learning the truth.

    • @monkeywithtrombone
      @monkeywithtrombone Před 2 lety +2

      I didn't know it was an accident. I learned that the colonists were mad and started pelting stuff at them causing the soldiers to fire and kill five people.

    • @samstall9173
      @samstall9173 Před 2 lety

      In almost every country, the history taught in schools is just fanfiction.

    • @Tenwaystospoildinner
      @Tenwaystospoildinner Před 2 lety +2

      Fun fact: John Adams, who would become the second president, successfully defended the British soldiers from the Boston Massacre in court afterwards.

    • @SungJaeUng3
      @SungJaeUng3 Před 2 lety +1

      @@monkeywithtrombone misfire after getting hit in the face with a rock, and due to line tactics of the day, when soldiers farther away from the center of the line heard the shot, they assumed the order to fire had been given.

    • @frokghug
      @frokghug Před 2 lety +4

      @@SungJaeUng3 I don't mean to doubt you but I had learned the same as Jason. Do you have a source for the gun going off as a *result* of the soldier being hit by the rock? I know the event was obviously blown up to be more (served its purpose as propaganda at the time so I get it), but I had always believed it was soldiers who panicked being hit by rocks from a much larger and increasingly angry crowd and made the decision to shoot and then the rest playing out as you said, with others believing the order to fire had been given.

  • @ThePereubu1710
    @ThePereubu1710 Před 2 lety +1

    Your point about "we only learned the bad things that happened" is SO important. Yes, dreadful things did happen but people need to be taught HOW we got there, what caused it, how it could have been stopped etc. as well as the brutality and pointlessness of war.

  • @jonathanrichwine1996
    @jonathanrichwine1996 Před rokem +1

    You shouldn’t be heart broken about the A bombs, because of 2 reasons
    1) the Allies gave Japan an ultimatum to surrender or “face destruction” which the Japanese refused.
    2) the alternative option was to invade the Japanese home islands code named “Operation: Downfall” which would’ve resulted in millions more casualties on both sides

    • @rileytruax766
      @rileytruax766 Před 27 dny

      yeah a lot of people dont know that they actually warned the civilians before dropping the A bombs by dropping leaflets over the city's and neighboring towns and villages everyone calls it a war crime but this was the first use of these bombs and even America was surprised on how devastating they were. and since they warned the civs anyone who died from the bombs died by their own fault (not that it makes it any less tragic not trying to take away from human death)

  • @SphynxsShadow
    @SphynxsShadow Před 2 lety +1

    As a Kiwi, I expect no less than to see the odd jab at us out of friendly neighbourly rivalry haha. Love your reactions to learning new things :)

  • @johnnyb8412
    @johnnyb8412 Před 7 měsíci

    One thing Churchill was great at doing is winding up Hitler and rallying up military spirit through great speeches and of course his humour because when times are shit humour gets you through it

  • @channelterminated6699
    @channelterminated6699 Před 2 lety +1

    AMAZING! She didn't struggle with the headphone cords!

  • @aguilarjr
    @aguilarjr Před 20 dny +1

    American here 🇺🇸 🫡 … I wasn’t offended. Also, new subscriber here. YT recommended your reaction to History of the Entire World video. And just like you, I love to learn, especially about history.

  • @FengshenNL
    @FengshenNL Před 2 lety

    Aww yiss, new reaction video about one of my favourite Oversimplified videos by a great youtuber on my birthday! :D
    Thanks a lot for yet another amazing video :)

  • @rhythmkhandelwal2940
    @rhythmkhandelwal2940 Před 2 lety +4

    Amazing, do coldwar next from oversimplified or French revolution

  • @frozenstorm1658
    @frozenstorm1658 Před 2 lety +4

    swastika isn't necessarily banned on youtube but it is banned in a lot of countries so Oversimplified probably just doesn't want his videos to get banned in those countries

  • @IsenoAlpha
    @IsenoAlpha Před 2 lety +4

    There are some crazy stories about WWII. Like the shear number of Russian men that died in the war caused an imbalance in the number of men vs women in the country that still exists. Or that the purple hearts (an American military award) that they give out to this day are ones left over from the ones they made in anticipation for possibly needing to invade Japan because they expected tons of people to die if that had happened. It's still kind of controversial to whether the nukes influenced Japan's decision to surrender though. But on the other hand some people claim that less people died because of the 2 nukes than would have died if the US had actually invaded Japan.

  • @89sponge
    @89sponge Před 2 lety +2

    21:10
    How it works
    The main idea of the encirclement: not only the seizure of territory, but also the withdrawal of large enemy forces from the war, which there is nothing to replace. To do this, the strongest and most mobile troops gather on the flanks to go forward and surround the enemy, while the center is relatively weak.
    The gloomy German genius enriched military science with the tactics of "asymmetric cannas":
    two flanks are equipped with a mobile strike group, and the center is equipped with sedentary and few forces, whose task is to hold on until the flanks make a breakthrough and connect in the enemy's rear. However, since there were not enough tanks for everyone, the shock groups were made different - one more mobile (tanks and motorized infantry), the other less mobile (just infantry). The result is the same - the enemy is surrounded, he runs out of food and ammunition, then death or captivity.
    ///
    Sorry for bad english and hello from Kazakhstan (its former russian-speaking soviet republic)

  • @atonesb5251
    @atonesb5251 Před 2 lety +2

    Oversimplified is so good. The ones on the American Civil War, American Revolution, and Napoleonic Wars are all really cool.

  • @Somewhere_Bagel
    @Somewhere_Bagel Před 2 lety +6

    The cold war is quite fascinating and interesting. It must of also been terrifying to live through due to 2 countries with the power to end the world basically having each other at gun point.

  • @EpicMRPancake
    @EpicMRPancake Před 2 lety +4

    I would also install adblocker and activate it when you're filming, the ads seem to be disrupting your train of thought.

  • @ajmccalla4511
    @ajmccalla4511 Před 2 lety +3

    Another video that really puts the destruction of WWII in perspective is The Fallen of World War II. It's an amazing representation.

  • @louies5988
    @louies5988 Před 2 lety

    “Sounds……..good.” - Oversimplified

  • @Anonymous-qj3sf
    @Anonymous-qj3sf Před 2 lety

    My great-grandfathers fought there. One of them was a machine gunner and participated in the liberation of Warsaw, Prague and in the battle for Berlin. His brother was a tanker and fought in Stalingrad. He has a medal "for courage" and "Order of the Patriotic War 2nd degree"

  • @andrewbyronloveshire5209
    @andrewbyronloveshire5209 Před 2 lety +4

    oh no tooo much sad face Alice - more funny ha-ha Alice - Guys lets only send all laugh vids to make Alice finally fall off her chair.
    I say over simplified Emu War - or Tim Minchin "Cont" aka "Context"

  • @jodieearl1492
    @jodieearl1492 Před 2 lety

    War doesn't determine who is right, war determines who is left.

  • @danielbutler8103
    @danielbutler8103 Před 2 lety +1

    19:30 that Pykrete thing dose work, Mythbusters tried it, made Super pykrete (Newspaper/Ice) and made a boat out of it.

  • @eddhardy1054
    @eddhardy1054 Před 2 lety +2

    12:03...the comment about us only sending two-hundred thousand men is a tad unfair as that was basically our entire standing army minus reserves. The army of the UK was always much smaller than it's French & German counterparts as we tended to concentrate on building up a strong navy instead (far more useful if you're living on an island).

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 2 lety +1

      Yep, and also the Luftwaffe had already failed to defeat the RAF in the Battle of Britain before the Luftwaffe targeted cities. They did that out of frustration because nothing they tried was suceeding. It was a full two weeks after the RAF bombed Berlin that the Luftwaffe opened their campaign against London etc. In the meantime they tried bombing the airfields, but failed every day. They gave up abs decided to target civilians.
      Its a complete myth that this decision decided the battle. No. Germany had already failed to win it.

  • @ShuffleUpandDeal32
    @ShuffleUpandDeal32 Před 2 lety

    Their clever deception tactics included movie props and inflatables, lol.

  • @coyotelong4349
    @coyotelong4349 Před 2 lety +1

    Next I highly recommend Oversimplified’s video on Hitler’s life before moving onto The Cold War

  • @gregbryant3826
    @gregbryant3826 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm an American. If anyone says they are offended by jokes you make about America they are lying but just in case tell them I said it and you are just quoting me. I will gladly field their angry e-mails. Team America was a full movie making basically the same joke you made. I promise they are concern trolling we know what we are.

  • @turbo_turk1
    @turbo_turk1 Před 2 lety

    King Htler was really prepared for this and President Stalin wasn’t, that was the main reason why they made great progress

  • @captaindelta43
    @captaindelta43 Před 2 lety

    Oversimplified is just Goated in these animation of learning history with fun.

  • @jadyv4980
    @jadyv4980 Před 2 lety +14

    The Soviets (Russians) probably played the biggest part in WW2 in defeating the Nazis, the eastern front saw fighting from 1941-1945 and the americans only really participated in Europe in smaller campaigns after 1941, for example Operation Torch in North Africa. However the Americans really only helped out the Soviets when they landed in Normandy on D-Day because Germany now had to fight on two fronts and couldnt focus on the Soviets alone. Also if you look at the death toll, the Americans lost around 400.000 Men, where as the Soviets lost all in all, around 27 million (civilians included), so we really gotta thank the russians for this one. Of course Iam not trying to insult or downplay Americas part in the war, but it is a common misconception in the west to assume America saved us from Nazi tyranny alone... Alot of the important and bloody fighting took place in the east. If the Soviets didnt hold off the germans, then the entire world would be speaking German now. But like I said Iam not trying to insult any americans or anything of the sort, Rest in Peace to all the heroes who fought and died fighting for liberty and humanity.
    Edit:
    I forgot to mention, America did play a very big role in defeating Imperial Japan however, brutal, costly island hopping campaigns where the tactics used and heavy naval fighting. So in the Pacific the Americans did play the biggest role probably.
    -Greetings from Germany ;)

    • @sledgehammerk35
      @sledgehammerk35 Před 2 lety +3

      I would argue that America and Britain made fairly significant contributions well before D-Day with their round-the-clock bombing campaign over Germany. American fighter sweeps over the skies of Germany was also incredibly devastating to the Luftwaffe. Other than that, I agree with what you are saying. Russia definitely contributed the most to defeating Germany.

    • @jairon_2518
      @jairon_2518 Před 2 lety +3

      America contributed in maaany things, starting by American industrial involvement during post-Great Depression years. Take a look at Albert Kahn work in the USSR. Industrial minds and capital that forged soviet industrial capabilities prior to the war, and then lend-lease which helped them hugely with raw materials like oil, steel or rubber, logistic trucks, tanks, airplanes, supplies of all type just at the time when the soviets were starving and had a large portion of their industrial factories and potential output occupied by Nazi Germany.
      Militarily their help was not minor either. Heavy bombing of the Ruhr area affected drastically German war production. Only in Africa 200,000 Afrika Korps troops were trapped. Then it came invasion of Italy, where Hitler had to deviate troops from the Eastern front to attend a more urgent (geographically) threat. Sure, Soviets did the most individually in Europe. But I’d say it was 50-50 distributed between the USSR and the rest of the allies, that is, including Western powers (mainly the US and the British Empire, you know) but also Poland, Yugoslavia, France, etc. It was surely a combined effort. And it was close enough at one point (probably at the end of Barbarossa, and also during Caucasus campaign prior Stalingrad disaster in 1942) that it could have fallen to the Axis side if not for American involvement. So I’d say at the end of the day it was as crucial.
      Cheers from Spain, sorry for my English. Not talking in our respective native languages hehe

    • @marcusaurelius5742
      @marcusaurelius5742 Před 2 lety +1

      I agree that the Soviet Union was the biggest factor in the defeat of Hitler's regime, but I would just say that time spent fighting and body count/blood spilled alone aren't enough when it comes to trying to quantify a country's total impact on the war. I also think we should be careful when singing the praises of the USSR. The hardship endured by the average soldier and civilian is something to be admired in general, but Stalin's regime was just as despicable as Hitler's and so was the vengeful behavior of many of his soldiers. As a German, I'm sure you know what I'm talking about. War will make a monster out of anyone. I think that's really the most important takeaway from all of this. It's not lines on a map or number of troops or good guys and bad guys. It's hell on earth.

    • @omargj1
      @omargj1 Před 2 lety +1

      There is a detail that many seems to forget, the Artic Convoys. USA and UK were supplying the URSS with 18 million tons of goods, as food, equipment, clothes for their soldiers, vehicles as the willys jeep 50000, and trucks, weapons, 19000 planes as the Hurricanes and the Bell P39 Airacobra that while was quite inefective in Europe or the Pacific theater of war since it's engine lacked power for high altitude combat but was a great for medioum or low altitude combat as was usual on the Eastern front.

    • @xviper2k
      @xviper2k Před 2 lety +3

      You conveniently forgot to mention half the war. lol
      This is the quickest way to annoy an American when talking about WW2. Far too many Europeans think it was actually Europe War 2 and completely forget the entire theater where Americans did most of the heavy lifting (not "probably," definitely.) And no, the entire world wouldn't be speaking German without the Soviets (who I'm not thanking, because they started the war on Germany's side and were only an "ally" out of necessity, which quickly ended along with the war.) If the Nazis couldn't even invade Britain, they stood no chance whatsoever of invading America or anything under its protection. They would have been what's known as a "you problem." Which is another reason why America needs to be given credit for its involvement (including being the allies' main supplier) in Europe --- they didn't need to be there.

  • @YungIsyan
    @YungIsyan Před rokem

    5:17 he kinda made this up but he also didnt. In the parts with french presence (rhineland), there is even footage where a french guy marches through the german streets, slaps a civilian which was just standing on the side of the road, and then stealing his hat

  • @AaronDarkus
    @AaronDarkus Před 2 lety +1

    What I find incredible about Oversimplified is how he manages to produce history content with a massive focus on humor while still tackling the overall basics of dark events in human history, specially a brutal and sinister one like the Second World War.
    No matter how controversial a topic can be, he always finds a way to make it look like a "good vs evil saturday cartoon show" with good jokes everywhere.
    PD: Towards the topic of showing swastikas, yes, I think they must be censored in CZcams, though the Iron Crosses of the military forces (Wehrmatch, Luffwaffe and Kriesgmarine) don´t (ands thus is why you see people using the iron crosses in the tactical map representations to display Nazi Germany rather than the flag with the swastika).
    Plus, I like his format of representing and summarizing history.

  • @DarthPudden
    @DarthPudden Před 2 lety +3

    You should do Oversimplified Emu War next.

  • @ronnieyates8527
    @ronnieyates8527 Před 2 lety

    Whenever you got a popup ad, I couldn't help but try and click it lol.

  • @grimmlight4541
    @grimmlight4541 Před 2 lety +1

    The hilarious part about all of this is the people believing they have light coming out of every orifice thinking they would of never joined the fascists and would of fight again at it. They would of most likely done there same thing as a country on crisis will do anything to survive and morals disappear.

  • @luisalmanza119
    @luisalmanza119 Před 2 lety +1

    I recommend 2 videos, "the seminal tragedy" by extra credits (which talks about the days that brought on WW1) and "the dead of WW2", a very popular video that breaks down who and how many died in WW2, as well as why. They’re both fantastic videos.

    • @louishermann7676
      @louishermann7676 Před 2 lety

      Speaking of Extra Credits, their 4-parter on the Bronze Age Collapse was amazing.

  • @wesleypeters4112
    @wesleypeters4112 Před 2 lety

    The Germans were very low on oil in 1941-1942 as they pushed into the Soviet Union. Hitler hoped to take control of the oil fields in the Caucasus. Instead of focusing on the cities, he should have routed his army and followed the Volga to the Caspain Sea.

  • @fireeaglefitnessmartialart935

    Some of those details of ww2 I wasn't familiar with, and/or I don't remember hearing or learning.

  • @QBITASSASSIN
    @QBITASSASSIN Před 2 lety +1

    You could try using an Ad Blocker to prevent all the popups.

  • @drakeloki4214
    @drakeloki4214 Před rokem

    That story about your grandfather letting a young enemy soldier go happened to Hitler in ww1, he was in no condition to fight alone and an ally soldier could have killed him but felt bad and let him go.

  • @xliquidflames
    @xliquidflames Před 2 lety +2

    Great video, as always. WWI & II are full of stories of humans doing incredible, insane things. My favorite, being the computer geek that I am, is the one about Allan Turing and his team that built one of the first computers that they used to crack the Enigma. It was mentioned in passing in this video but it's a fascinating story. Not only did Turing come up with a way to crack the German codes, but he had to do it under the stress of being found out for being gay. As you can imagine, LGBTQ rights were not the greatest in the 1940s. It was illegal to be gay. Churchill said Turing made the biggest single contribution to Allied victory. His work laid some of the foundations for not just modern computers, but also encryption and statistics, all while having to hide his sexuality. He was engaged to the only woman on the team, Joan Clarke, who is fascinating in her own right, just to keep the secret. He may have also had Asperger's, on top of it all. The movie about him and his team, The Imitation Game, is really good. Benedict Cumberbatch plays Turing and it's worth a watch. I plan to make the long pilgrimage from Florida to Bletchley Park one day.

  • @RexTyrranae
    @RexTyrranae Před 2 lety +2

    You should react to the Napoleonic wars, Its pretty interesting. Its also from Oversimplified.

  • @SomeRandomGuy499
    @SomeRandomGuy499 Před 2 lety +1

    Cold War video is really well made and pretty much covers the topic, so it would be cool if you did it. My favorite OverSimplified videos are about French and Russian revolutions though, but it's just me and the topics I prefer.
    People in comments are mentioning Fallen of WW2 - it gives more perspective on the death toll and victims of WW2. But while it's sad to see "~ 50 - 80 million killed", seeing more specific numbers and circumstances is really (and somebody mentioned in the comments that he prefers "happy Alice" over "sad Alice" - although for me, "Alice learning about stuff" is fun enough)
    Extra Credits / Extra History also have great videos about history - usually more detailed and divided into more parts, but very fun and entertaining anyway. People in the comments mention their WW1 series, but all of their videos are awesome, especially when they're talking about less known events.

  • @starrynight1657
    @starrynight1657 Před 2 lety +1

    Some places still had more die in WW1 than WW2, the UK for one.

  • @philipp0209
    @philipp0209 Před 2 lety +1

    what's wrong with all of us speaking german right now haha 😂

  • @futuregenerationz
    @futuregenerationz Před 2 lety

    I'm American, and as I see it, 3 things that had to happen to win WW2, happened. UK held, USSR held, Axis declared war on USA. if any one of those things doesn't happen, I think we'd probably have lost. How's that for simplified.

  • @HoneyMike
    @HoneyMike Před rokem

    32:04 I think at the time people were not allowed to take the emperor's picture, so that's why MacArthur had that picture printed. Not just because he was taller

  • @hdtripp6218
    @hdtripp6218 Před 2 lety

    The United States in anticipation of having so many wounded in an invasion of Japan began producing Purple Heart Medals...because we made so many we have never had to produce the Purple Heart medal, the ones issued today are still from the batch produced during WW2

  • @volkerkonrad8937
    @volkerkonrad8937 Před 2 lety

    „Ancient rome in 20 minutes“ is a fun video to react to! U r great.

  • @TheYoinkan1503
    @TheYoinkan1503 Před 2 lety +1

    To get a better understanding of the scale in this war, you should check out the video titled: The fallen of WW2

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 Před 2 lety

    Don't apologize to people who get offended by youtube videos. They should apologize for wasting other people's time.

  • @jrtspace7945
    @jrtspace7945 Před rokem

    I always pronounce Hiroshima the way u do as well but who knows, But i did subscribe! I Love your positive attitude!

  • @alexissmith5589
    @alexissmith5589 Před 2 lety

    This is my first time on this channel and I love your content and it's nice seeing a fellow Aussie on CZcams. I want to recommend you to watch Death Battle, I take two characters (most of the time) from pop culture and pits them in a fight to the death while doing analysis on their abilities.

  • @majindomttv3903
    @majindomttv3903 Před 2 lety +1

    I just found your channel and I heard the beginning part. Some people always get offended. But you said america saved the war a lot of people don’t realize how much. Infographics show did a video on what if america didn’t exist and it mentions how many tons of food and supplies and just how many 100s of thousands of trucks and ammo was given to places like Russia to keep them alive.

  • @libertatemadvocatus1797
    @libertatemadvocatus1797 Před 2 lety +1

    The Cold War was "cold" between NATO and the Warsaw Pact, but very hot elsewhere.
    Most of the wars of the 20th Century were either caused by or made worse by the Cold War.
    The Korean War, Vietnam War, the civil wars in Africa and Latin America, etc.

    • @user-sn1hi7my7x
      @user-sn1hi7my7x Před 2 lety

      Weren't the Vietnam war and Korean war instigated by the U.S. and U.K.? I could be wrong.

  • @thedevourerofgods1686
    @thedevourerofgods1686 Před 2 lety

    something i think you'd enjoy a lot is Sam O'Nella, either that or the Emu War by Oversimplified.

  • @EddieLove
    @EddieLove Před 2 lety

    Speaking strictly from a strategic standpoint, what Hitler was able to accomplish is honestly astonishing... truly a real life super villain.

  • @acrefray
    @acrefray Před 2 lety

    As a mention: Nagasaki wasn't the original target for the second A-bomb. The original target was scrapped due to bad weather.

  • @danielcavesripfuture9866

    Two of the funniest and best are the Neapolitanonit wars, and the pig war (my opinion)

  • @StephanePare
    @StephanePare Před 5 měsíci

    In the first weeks of Soviet occupied Germany, women meeting each other in the street would discreetly flash finger counts at each other. That was the number of time each woman had been raped that day. Soviets pretended there was no violence done to local civilians, and anyone claiming otherwise was executed for treason. So, discreet finger counts at each other was women's way of speaking out.

  • @nickjeffery536
    @nickjeffery536 Před 2 lety +2

    Can you watch WW3 Oversimplified next, please - I'd like to know how that one ends up!

  • @bryanbrady877
    @bryanbrady877 Před 2 lety

    For what it's worth, hope this gives you a laugh. You resemble someone I went to school with yet I just now realized that. It took dreaming about her then watching another of your videos for me to put it together. Anyway, thanks for the entertainment. I respect you and your cat. Prefer wolves myself.

  • @MrPuddle01
    @MrPuddle01 Před 2 lety

    Adding a comment to make CZcams algorithm happy

  • @zegh8578
    @zegh8578 Před 2 lety

    Swastikas are normally allowed to be shown, because theres all kinds of context - historical, cultural, educational etc, many cultures use this shape in their history, decor, symbolism etc - BUT, in Germany, for example - as you might guess - it is indeed not permitted to show or fly the German nazi flag, the red background, white circle, black swastika inside - the very unambigious flag we all know. Same applies here in Norway, where we might make exceptions for examples for the purpose of shooting a war-movie, which we have done on a few occasions :D
    Many youtubers will therefore blur or replace the nazi German swastika-flag for something related, like the German army symbol, or the German imperial tricolor, so that their videos won't be banned from showing in those countries where displaying the flag is forbidden. Video games set in WW2 often do the same, in order to avoid a German ban.

  • @pjpleiss
    @pjpleiss Před rokem

    Global population in the mid 1940s was around 2.25 Million. That was around 1.7 to 3.4% of the total global population wasted.

  • @jdnexited
    @jdnexited Před 3 měsíci +1

    Day 3 of asking Alice to return

  • @johnhelfrich977
    @johnhelfrich977 Před 2 lety

    The worst thing about the 50-80 million death toll is that unlike in world war 1 the majority of those deaths were civilians, and the reason we don't have an accurate death toll is because we don't (and probably never will) have an exact count on how many died in concentration camps.

  • @ipawnyanab
    @ipawnyanab Před 2 lety

    You gotta do yourself a favour and install an adblocker, they are free, quick to install and you dont even notice they are there, and the best part; you'll never see an ad on youtube ever again.

  • @American_Outcast
    @American_Outcast Před 2 lety

    Internet Historian is Pretty Funny too. His Area 51 video Is hilarious

  • @winstonchurchill1639
    @winstonchurchill1639 Před 2 lety +4

    You should watch the Cold War next

  • @The_Deaf_Aussie
    @The_Deaf_Aussie Před 2 lety

    get "ad block for youtube" extension for your browswer.. you will NEVER see ads in any shape or form on youtube.. ever again.

  • @datguy3581
    @datguy3581 Před 2 lety +1

    It's sad to hear of the tragedy of WWII on both sides. And how it led to the Cold War where more people would die.

  • @CaddyJim
    @CaddyJim Před 2 lety +1

    I've seen this many of times and never noticed they put the two *Mussolini* pictures together making them look like him kissing himself good eye, even though you had makeup in it 😜

  • @quoniam426
    @quoniam426 Před 2 lety

    Had the Treaty of Versailles not been overthrown by Germany, they would have had to pay France for damage until 1984 !!!

  • @macadelic2492
    @macadelic2492 Před 2 lety +7

    Don't worry about making America jokes
    We're not all snowflakes lol

  • @lenar3457
    @lenar3457 Před 2 lety +2

    good video, you should react to "the fallen of world war II" it's really good, also check out extra credits all their videos are gold, especially recommend the punic wars and ww1 "the seminal tragedy" series, it talks about how world war 1 coul've been avoided multiple times but unfortunately wasn't

  • @jimlee6856
    @jimlee6856 Před 2 lety +3

    Great reaction. Please continue with the history videos, particularly with oversimplified :)

  • @als_pals
    @als_pals Před 2 lety +4

    eh the american joke was funny 🤷‍♀

  • @greatfox232
    @greatfox232 Před 2 lety

    It's said the 20th century (1901-2000) is the bloodiest century in recorded human history....

  • @Zinthos.
    @Zinthos. Před 2 lety

    The balls on this girl to still say "Bada Boom" on a WWII video :D

  • @tcsam73
    @tcsam73 Před 2 lety

    American here, I thought that comment was both funny and very apt.

  • @taylorogden5959
    @taylorogden5959 Před 2 lety

    Ya the photo with the emperor was to show he wasn't a God basically

  • @despair_ts1823
    @despair_ts1823 Před rokem

    Yes watch the Cold War one. Its so good!