TOO Much Death | The Fallen Of World War II | Reaction

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  • čas přidán 3. 01. 2023
  • #funny #reaction #best #thefallen #ww2 #reaction #reactionvideo #worldwar2
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Komentáře • 55

  • @JPMadden
    @JPMadden Před rokem +22

    Yes, this subject is horrifying. But one of the advantages of learning history is that many of today's problems don't seem quite so bad. Every time I hear someone complain that things have never been worse than they are today, I think "learn some history."

  • @ALEXRUSSIANOCCUPANT
    @ALEXRUSSIANOCCUPANT Před 7 měsíci +3

    "Oh, gentlemen! If I could walk, then I would have reached the holy places of Russia: Leningrad, Stalingrad, Sevastopol, I would kneel down and kiss this holy Land."
    The 32nd President of the United States Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

  • @RubyGB
    @RubyGB Před rokem +17

    BTW: The "battle" of Stalingrad lasted from July 1942 to Jan 1943 so it was not a typical attack, fight, over and done battle in the usual sense. In Stalingrad it wasn't just the fighting that caused so many Russian deaths but starvation and the cold winter weather. The Nazi supply lines were overstretched and broken causing massive starvation. The German Army was not fully mechanized (still using horses for supply/armament transport) and the soldiers were reduced to eating frozen horse meat if they were lucky when any horses died of starvation or froze to death. The German troops also lacked cold weather gear as Hitler believed it would be a quick summer campaign, so winter gear was unnecessary to issue, resulting in massive numbers of German soldiers freezing to death. If you look at pictures of captured troops, they are in summer uniforms/coats and most have rags wrapped around their feet. The German Army was not fully mechanized (still using horses for supply/armament transport) and the soldiers were reduced to eating frozen horse meat if they were lucky. The German Army was not fully mechanized (still using horses for supply/armament transport) and the soldiers were reduced to eating frozen horse meat if they were lucky. Field Marshall Friedrich Paulus begged Hitler to allow them to surrender multiple times, only to be ordered by Hitler to fight to the last man, and in desperation surrendered the 6th Army (of more than 280,000 men under Paulus’ command, half were already dead or dying, about 35,000 had been evacuated from the front, and the remaining 91,000 were hauled off to Soviet POW camps). These same issues contributed to the defeat of Napolean in 1812 when his troops invaded Russia (Hitler should have studied history).

  • @rosemariediamond5948
    @rosemariediamond5948 Před rokem +8

    I like how you are always wanting to learn about history and expand your knowledge. I always had a motto I live by even now at 67 years old. “Always searching,Always learning, Always changing “.

  • @srt8rocketship241
    @srt8rocketship241 Před rokem +7

    My Grandpa was in North Africa with the Big Red 1. Took a round of shrapnel and got out alive. This was the greatest generation. Hats off to all our Veterans , past and present. Stand for them , at least stand.

    • @ladyshar42
      @ladyshar42 Před rokem +1

      my grandpa drove one of the troop boats on Dday. We know he then went on to Africa, Italy, and behind the lines in Europe (he was a sharpshooter). His brother was on the Red Ball Express in Europe, and while we don't know much b/c he burned his uniform when he came home and refused to talk about it, we do know he helped liberate at least one concentration camp. I'm going to guess he saw a lot of aftermath of the Allied fire bombing as well. These were all young men, most in their late teens/early twenties, it had to be so traumatic.

    • @srt8rocketship241
      @srt8rocketship241 Před rokem

      @@ladyshar42 Yeah , my Gramps didn't care to talk about it either. He just wanted to laugh and tell jokes. Think he just was trying to forget some. Most of his buddies were killed in their parachutes. But they almost ran Rommel out of gas once..

  • @bugvswindshield
    @bugvswindshield Před rokem +5

    14:17 In portland ore, just last week.
    An eldery man was at the MAX train station and a junky attacked him. Very early am. Police were called. Turns out he was trying to eat the elderly mans face. Removing one ear and as a first responders said "chewed half his face" .
    People just busted out their cell phones. No one did a thing.

  • @sophiaschommer7337
    @sophiaschommer7337 Před rokem +4

    Stalingrad was just absolutely unthinkable. It was the deadliest battle in history. A estimate is about 2 million people dead. The soviets lost about 1,100,000 soldiers (very rough estimate with that much death it's impossible to know). The Germans lost upwards of half a million (probably closer to 7 or 800,000 men). An estimated 19,000 people died a day. It wasnt even just shooting, the winter and starvation killed many. It was simply unreal. To this day every year they still find mass graves of soldiers and civilians from ww2 all over Russia. In fact so many men died in Russia as a result of ww1 and ww2 the male population still has not fully recovered over 80 years later. In fact it got so bad that sometimes kids would fight as soldiers. There are numerous accounts of child soldiers in Russia and Germany (especially in Germany at the end of the war). Stalingrad was the turning point in the European war. Germany simply could not recover from losing that many soldiers (especially since they were some of the best in the military at the time).
    “ . . . When we got to Stalingrad, there were 140 of us, but by September 1, after two weeks of battle, only 16 remained. All the rest were wounded and killed. We don’t have a single officer, and the non-commissioned officer had to take over the command of the division. Up to a thousand wounded soldiers a day are taken back to the rear from Stalingrad. . . .”~Walter Oppermann

    • @tizi087
      @tizi087 Před rokem

      nobody knows how many died there on the soviet side. The soviet at one point stopped counting who they ferry over the river

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 Před rokem +6

    I was able to find a credit for that photo you wondered about at around 6:11...it was reportedly taken by Chief Photographer's Mate (CPHoM) Robert F. Sargent. The picture is described as... "A LCVP (Landing Craft, Vehicle, Personnel) from the U.S. Coast Guard-manned USS Samuel Chase disembarks troops of Company E, 16th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division (the Big Red One) wading onto the Fox Green section of Omaha Beach (Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France) on the morning of June 6, 1944. American soldiers encountered the newly formed German 352nd Division when landing. During the initial landing two-thirds of Company E became casualties." And the population of the USSR in 1940 was reportedly just a little under 195 million.

  • @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.
    You asked quite often why the photos were taken. Maybe as proof that it really happened, and it wasn't just some sick fantasy cooked up in someone's mind? Maybe it was to show future generations not to mess with said army? Maybe it was to chuckle over later with friends. Who knows really. As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words.

  • @susanpeters5392
    @susanpeters5392 Před rokem +2

    From England UK ... my grandad was taken a prisoner of war at Dunkirk...never talked about it .... But is favourite film was 1972 s THE GODFARTHER I was 12 years at the time , When he came to visit which was rare xxx

  • @flutesong5527
    @flutesong5527 Před rokem +4

    Happy History - the 1969 moon landing was real

  • @srt8rocketship241
    @srt8rocketship241 Před rokem +2

    Lest we forget.

  • @bugvswindshield
    @bugvswindshield Před rokem +3

    russo Ukraine was has less than 100k on both sides. All deaths, non covid but war related.

  • @anonymousanonymous4058

    Oh they're working on another WW... Humans NEVER learn.

  • @HyPnOsS1933
    @HyPnOsS1933 Před rokem

    History is not happy we live in happy times without noing it 😅

  • @Coleorton7
    @Coleorton7 Před rokem +2

    Can you react to The Nuremburg Trial & The Tokyo Trial Explained by CZcamsr History Scope? It tells us what happened to those that started the War & committed various war crimes & genocides, thanks!

  • @evanirvana500
    @evanirvana500 Před rokem +3

    Actually the Ukraine is not one of the 44 largest economies so technically what he said at the end us still true. And so far anyway no one else is getting involved so so far anyway this isn't a world War. Technically Ukraine is doing a fine job. Nobody wants ww3.

    • @LaptopLarry330
      @LaptopLarry330 Před rokem

      The big question in the Ukrainian War is “Will the war spread?” Will Belarus join the war? Will Russia invade Poland, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia? Will NATO join the battle, leading to World War III? That is why there is so much concern over the Ukrainian War.

    • @evanirvana500
      @evanirvana500 Před rokem

      @Larry Ressler I get that. But as of right now Ukraine is beating their ass. And I think other than some hot air to needle us, has no plans to go further than Ukraine or they would have in the beginning and were threatening Poland. Bc that for sure would mean our direct military involvement. But putin went silent again and no further invasion past Ukraine. Putins a soviet and wants that back but he's no Stalin. I'm more concerned his ineptitude will cause ww3. But in truth I'm much more concerned about China.

  • @arnodobler1096
    @arnodobler1096 Před rokem +1

    No offense, but what are you learning in US history classes?🤔

  • @thatguyofdark
    @thatguyofdark Před rokem

    regardless whether the war in urkaine breaks the long peace or not, i find it true when he said the longer it lasts, the more significant it becomes. Yes there is war but after a long period of relative peace the worlds reaction was largely economic and not directly militaristic. Most people appear to want the war to end asap and feel bad for both the ukrainians being invaded and the russians being conscripted and forced to fight, and id say thats an important show of how the world feels about war.

  • @tizi087
    @tizi087 Před rokem

    The eastern front is simply another scale. One cannot imagine the losses. and those 8.7 million arte defintly wrong. One historian estimated 12 million as the minimum number (boris Kavalerschik). another suggest 15 million (askey Nigel). Zetterling hints in his works that he supposes that as many as 20 million soviet soldiers became irrecoverable casualities

  • @viteklk
    @viteklk Před rokem +3

    Like always! We will die, but we will win!
    Proud to be Russian
    Thanks man for reaction ✌️

  • @marciusmarciukas5467
    @marciusmarciukas5467 Před rokem

    Mr. reactor did follow the video at all?

  • @RantaHun
    @RantaHun Před rokem +1

    watch the Soviet film "go and see" believe me, you will not look at the Nazis in a different way as people and animals.

  • @michaelmchone9239
    @michaelmchone9239 Před rokem

    Please react to God Bless the USA by Lee Greenwood, Homefree and the US Airforce band. You won't regret it friend. Blessings to you and yours 🙏 It will bring you joy

  • @white_atrox
    @white_atrox Před 10 měsíci

    🌻🌿🌐❤

  • @firefighterchick
    @firefighterchick Před rokem +2

    My next recommendation is this:
    What if The World without the US
    This a link for part 1
    czcams.com/video/-60bP1hnpaI/video.html
    It Goes into an interesting scenario that follows a point he made in this video We didn't send troops until after Pearl Harbor was attacked. However, we sent supplies, trucks, ships, etc to the allies like Britain and The Soviet Union.
    The video continues after WWII. It's in 2 parts.
    The pictures, documentation, and film that were presented at the Nuremberg Trials came from the Nazis themselves.
    They kept detailed accounts of everything.
    As Americans, we can not even begin to imagine what it was like for those living in Europe and Asia, and Africa much less what it was like to be in combat.
    This concept was that just battling armies meant the war would last longer,
    and attacking civilians as well would push their governments to surrender faster.
    The allies didn't start this concept but to an extent did follow suit.

    • @matthewcharles5867
      @matthewcharles5867 Před rokem

      Only lasted a couple of years longer than ww1. The lend lease system that the allies used with vehicles and supplies etc made a huge difference in ww2.
      The supply system compared to what was used in ww1 was world's apart . The use of aircraft and much faster ships meant supplies could be sent around the world much quicker.
      Australia suffered double the amount of casualties in ww1 then ww2 . Ww1 had a much greater effect on our country than the 2nd world war.

  • @RubyGB
    @RubyGB Před rokem +4

    Why are Soviet military losses so high? First, they were unprepared for the initial invasion (they had signed a non-aggression pact with Hitler). The hate and brutality of the Germans toward the Soviets was second to only the retaliation of the Russians on entering Germany. Secondly, Stalin and his generals placed no value on the lives of their troops often ordering troops to walk across mine fields ahead of the tanks as the tanks were considered too valuable to risk. Soviet leadership willingly used troops as cannon fodder to achieve objectives. This is why at the end, while Patton could have attacked and taken Berlin first, it was decided by Eisenhower to hold back and let the Soviets enter first since it would be street to street, door to door, floor to floor fighting for every inch with massive loss of troops which didn't matter to Stalin but did matter to the other Allied commanders and leaders.

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 Před rokem

      As I understand it, the zones of occupation had been agreed to at Yalta, and so whoever took Berlin, it was to be occupied by all the Allies just like Germany as a whole. So Eisenhower did not see much reason to race the Soviets to it, and wanted to avoid political issues, and prevent as much possibility of confrontation between the USA and USSR to a minimum. I know Churchill talked about Berlin being fair game, but I think Ike had kind of been told if not ordered by Marshall and FDR that there should be no race to Berlin between the US and Soviets. But I admit that I may have missed some of the most recent research on the topic.✌

  • @janiceduke1205
    @janiceduke1205 Před rokem

    "The German invaders want a war of extermination with the peoples of the U.S.S.R. Well, if the Germans want to have a war of extermination, they will get it." (Loud and prolonged applause.) Stalin 6 November, 1941.

  • @jonathanlindsey463
    @jonathanlindsey463 Před 5 měsíci

    never saw it before?? WRONG

  • @user-eh4ne4ou8c
    @user-eh4ne4ou8c Před 5 měsíci

    In fact, the USSR lost many more civilians than soldiers. The total losses of the USSR amounted to 27 million people, and only 11 million of them were military, the remaining 16 million were civilians. And in general, the casualty figures were completely different, Germany lost more than 8 million people on the eastern front.
    The words that Stalin forbade evacuation from the Leningrad region are a lie. Read about the "Road of Life", this highway through Lake Ladoga, medicines, weapons and ammunition were delivered to the city along with food, and people were evacuated from the city along it. More than 1.3 million people, mostly women and children, were evacuated by road during the blockade. So don't believe this lie.

  • @DarkMatterBurrito
    @DarkMatterBurrito Před rokem +1

    I don't really like how the original video uses the tern "Nazi" for every soldier. Most of the Wehrmacht were not Nazis.

  • @NatashaAvtonomova
    @NatashaAvtonomova Před rokem +1

    Мир спас русский солдат и так веками , русские все разгребают или уже давно многие народы пропали с лица земли и все забывают , каждый век одно и тоже , мир полон идиотами жадными до денег , не поймут никак , что жизнь дороже всего , всех живущих под солнцем . И опять России придется разгребать судя по поведению нынешнему запада с их подельниками . Смотрите документальный фильм Неизвестная война он на английском языке и поймете , что тогда в мире произошло и это чудовищно , там документальные кадры и интервью переживших это , а не прилуманная история , как сейчас . Забыли , что СССР победил и над Рейхстагом в Берлине было красное знамя , а сейчас памятники сносят советским солдатам освободителям , это позор !!!

  • @pedjavukmirovic6770
    @pedjavukmirovic6770 Před rokem

    Long live mother russia.....westerners will never recognize.....include today....like in weakest lint lets all vote strongest link....