The Scariest German Commander of WW2
12:41
9 сағат бұрын
The Terrifying Nazi Super Ace
16:25
14 сағат бұрын
The Most Hated Machine of WW2
15:29
Пікірлер
@servantofgod5642
@servantofgod5642 15 минут бұрын
Funny how the demonic USA labels them not Vietnamese defending their nation but " communists" as if those born and bred in that country were the foreign invaders.
@jimmyconway8025
@jimmyconway8025 16 минут бұрын
Badass!
@jonmandelbaum5395
@jonmandelbaum5395 28 минут бұрын
Ok but what are nimits
@yooperrandy
@yooperrandy 40 минут бұрын
My Mom, whose name is Rose, actually was a riveter on the L4 and L5 at Stinson Aircraft in Wayne MI during the war. She'll love this! She turns 100 next month.
@rmenard1986
@rmenard1986 41 минут бұрын
Seeing the world today our grandfather's would be so upset!
@bjrnhjortshjandersen1286
@bjrnhjortshjandersen1286 42 минут бұрын
there was no gunfire during the first wave....? That was strange and unexpected....it came later.
@kha58
@kha58 44 минут бұрын
The Italians are not know for their fighting prowess. They are lovers not fighters.😂
@drnspi
@drnspi Сағат бұрын
Width 3.9ft ?
@bracoop2
@bracoop2 Сағат бұрын
Increased fire rate isn’t necessarily a better thing. Run out of ammo quicker.
@wmwardwell
@wmwardwell 2 сағат бұрын
They were told, drop your weapons and screw the USA !
@williamkirk1156
@williamkirk1156 2 сағат бұрын
Good story. Thanks for sharing it.
@ElvinLeadfoot
@ElvinLeadfoot 2 сағат бұрын
Special Agent Norris.. Huh …learn something everyday:)
@armylrs2391
@armylrs2391 2 сағат бұрын
Patrick Tadina was far more terrifying
@McCarthy_Was_Right
@McCarthy_Was_Right 3 сағат бұрын
quintessential boomer trash
@OlJarhead
@OlJarhead 3 сағат бұрын
I read his biography many years ago. One hell of a soldier and a true badass.
@MAsonTRIX
@MAsonTRIX 3 сағат бұрын
Semper Fi
@johnathansaegal3156
@johnathansaegal3156 4 сағат бұрын
Remember folks, please... the Heer, the Wehrmacht, were just regular soldiers and conscripts from Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia )and a few other countries). They were NOT Nazi, nor SS. Almost all of them had zero idea about the horrors that were taking place in concentration camps. POWs only learned of the horrors of the camps after being told by American or British soldiers guarding them far from the atrocities the SS were committing in the Holocaust. IF the regular German soldier heard anything it was that Jews were being sent out of Germany. Nothing more. Soldiers like "The Beast of Omaha" were just regular teenagers/men fighting against the evil Americans, British and French... they hated the Allies because they did see newsreels of the firebombing of Dresden and other civilian cities. Knowing nothing of the concentration camps, these soldiers only knew the Allies were the ones killing innocent civilians... so they put up a hard fight. I am as American as one gets. Both my grandfathers fought in WWII and my grandma was a "Rosie the Riveter". The stories of what fighting was like in WWII was brutal, even so, I cannot place any ill thoughts against the normal German soldier of the Wehrmacht. They were simply soldiers just like my grandparents. They were not Nazi SS by any means whatsoever, so please don't refer to them as anything but soldiers fighting for their country as best as they could.
@scottw5315
@scottw5315 4 сағат бұрын
There is a good movie about Marseille. Think it's called the Star of Africa.
@galatians-2.20
@galatians-2.20 4 сағат бұрын
Does it bother anyone else's OCD when you see zoomed in footage of machine gun or canonns firing and you see the wall paper flapping in the wind and overpressure from barrels? Just me?
@johngrissom9147
@johngrissom9147 4 сағат бұрын
My dad Vernon was there in the 69th Infantry !!!! Unfortunately he passed on July 4th 2007 !!!!! If there is anyone out there still alive and knew my father I would love to hear from you !!!! I want to thank all of you for your Courageous Service Sirs !!!!
@butterfinger1171
@butterfinger1171 4 сағат бұрын
MacAruthur was a bumbling Buffon.. He was always trying to fuel his unwarranted ego.
@benjaminmajor5144
@benjaminmajor5144 4 сағат бұрын
All that technology and still lost
@wesparker7748
@wesparker7748 5 сағат бұрын
A Battery 4th Battalion 42nd Field Artillery 4th Infantry Division 1967/1968. We fired countless numbers of rounds through the old M101A1 and I never even saw the M102. I don't know who got them but we sure didn't.
@MichaelKunz-mt2oo
@MichaelKunz-mt2oo 5 сағат бұрын
Bader repeatedly disobeyed orders and should have been court martialed for insubordination.
@grim3897
@grim3897 5 сағат бұрын
CAlling nazi a person who very well might have not been one is quite offensive, if you are going to call people names, at least have the decency of providing prove
@robbertc3418
@robbertc3418 6 сағат бұрын
The sound quality sucks
@RNemy509
@RNemy509 6 сағат бұрын
You ever see what a 40 mm round does to a human body? Neither did they! Vaporized into a mist
@xunbekannt1572
@xunbekannt1572 7 сағат бұрын
Thats what i call a killstreak! Was he at least allowed to call an air strike? I mean 1000 kills without dying 1 time he could even ask for a nuke😂
@warwarneverchanges4937
@warwarneverchanges4937 7 сағат бұрын
One minute your downing a bud and smoking your pipe 30 min later your deep in the djungle wetlands
@trucker287
@trucker287 7 сағат бұрын
Cut the annoying music!
@mirola73
@mirola73 7 сағат бұрын
Some people manage to regain some level of humanity in war, others go the other way and turn into gruesome serial killers and torturers.
@j3ff3ry18
@j3ff3ry18 7 сағат бұрын
Marseilles has been one of my heroes since youth; he brought Michael Jordan level athleticism to air combat. Suave , rebellious & defiant, he also had a genius level skill born in for deflection shooting. He once wiped kut an entire lufberry of hawkers with tactics used later by the USAF boom & zoom era pilots. He was a madman but chilled witn American jazz albums & dames. He loved his mom & while he was a German military officer , he held no strong empathy for the evils of the Nazis he flew for. This was a serious pilot who was the 1930s equivalent of a rock star. ( he apparently has been given the description as ' creepy ' because in this fake tan society combined with the photos of him from the 30s and 40s which are already washed out and often water colored , black and white photos , together with Marseilles greased back jazz haircut and his white pale complexion it kind of gives him an Addams Family, vampire look ... but , dude was drip. he would wear tennis shoes in combat to maintain better control over his rudder pedals)
@roger-bs5zp
@roger-bs5zp 7 сағат бұрын
didnt you mean the usaaf as the usaf was not created yet
@mikescott5440
@mikescott5440 8 сағат бұрын
DarkDocs, how about a video about LRP / LRRPs already! These were the most impressive teams operating in Vietnam, surprised you haven't covered it yet.
@ulrichschnier307
@ulrichschnier307 9 сағат бұрын
TCO with A-SQN (Ge) SAMGROUP 38 from 1996-2000, XO with B-SQN (Ge) SAMGROUP 38 from 2000-2003, SQN-Cdr B-SQN (Ge) SAMGROUP 38 and Support-SQN (Ge) SAMGROUP 38 from 2003-2005 ... I've been with the iHAWK-System for almost an entire decade ... and I've "seen and done" it all ... Ft. Bliss, El Paso/TX, White Sands Missile Firing Range, NATO Missile Firing Installation (NAMFI), Crete/GRE ... wonderful memories. Colonel (GS), Ulrich Schnier, M.A. (German Airforce) "Missile Away !"
@skipnorwood8677
@skipnorwood8677 9 сағат бұрын
Other good resources for the truth about WWII are Dr. Joseph P. Farrell and Douglas Dietrich. I also read a book when i was in high school that one of history teachers told me to read. It's was about WWII from the Japanese perspective. It changed they way I look at these things forever. Unfortunately, I'm in my 70's now and I can't remember the name of it or the authors name either. It talked about how the emperor of Japan wanted to industrialized Japan and used the reparation loans from WWII to do that. Think about it for a minute. Japan was still a feudal country before WWII. It makes sense when you think about how Japan took over the electronics markets in the 60's and the auto market in the 70's. I also remember a story that Col. Prouty tells about how he was stationed on Guam to work on the prep for the invasion of Japan. His best friend was the head of logistics for the invasion and told him that the US had something like 5 hundred million dollars worth of equipment staged all over the area for the invasion. When the nukes were dropped, Prouty asked him what they were going to do with all of the equipment and he his friend said it was going to be shipped to Korea and Vietnam. I remind that was in 1945. How did they know that there would be wars in those countries in 1945 unless these things are part of a plan?
@v.prestorpnrcrtlcrt2096
@v.prestorpnrcrtlcrt2096 9 сағат бұрын
Hi @darkdocs, I'm unsubbing because SHITUBE will only play your vids. I enjoy your channel but when SHITUBE shoves 50 of your vids or any channels vids in my face, I get over it fast. Until SHITUBE can behave like an adult and stop the daily cyber HARASSMENT & BULLYING I have no need for what they call recommendations which are really HARASSMENTS. Thx for your vids, I'll watch them should I come across them, as long as it doesn't turn into this usual bullying and baseless accusations. BIG THX TO 🖕🏽YOURTUBE!! THE APP THAT WINS WHEN IT COMES TO SUCKING VIEWERS. SHAME
@skipnorwood8677
@skipnorwood8677 9 сағат бұрын
One of my uncles fought in the pacific in WWII on an aircraft carrier, while my grand father fought in Europe as part of the invasion force. My uncle told me many thing that you never read about in the history books. Things like Doolittle's raid on Japan was done with white phosphorus fire bombs which were supposed to be illegal. He also said the almost every city in Japan was fire bombed and burned to the ground long before the nukes were dropped. Some of is is also verified by col. Fletcher Prouty's in his videos. In the Tokyo bombing by Doolittle, more than 120,00 people perished because the houses and other buildings wee made of wood and the fire storm was unstoppable. There's a lot more to every war since the 1650's than most people realize. Our history books are full of half truths wrapped in lies to hide the fact that the banking families are behind them all. Wake up people, nothing is what you're being told it is.
@gomergomez1984
@gomergomez1984 9 сағат бұрын
They were still teaching the dusters to the national guard when I went to OSUT in early eighties at FT. Bliss.
@user-bm1vp1hp3c
@user-bm1vp1hp3c 10 сағат бұрын
The title of this video is wrong, Concorde and the TU144 were different aircraft
@y_ffordd
@y_ffordd 10 сағат бұрын
He had the same taste in dogs as Hitler, but Shriver had the decency to look after his dog before his untimely exit.
@isshinryu11
@isshinryu11 11 сағат бұрын
Direct action machines! Surrounded from the inside.
@DSWL_
@DSWL_ 12 сағат бұрын
i always wondered why the FG-42 had such an aggressive pistol grip angle. seems like it would be awkward to fire
@jeffreydenness2763
@jeffreydenness2763 13 сағат бұрын
Hurricane with an elliptical wing? You need to do your research a bit better. Most of these "docusoaps" are riddled with misinformation and film clips that are completely irrelevant because they show the wrong aircraft in comparison to the narrative.
@AuthenticChronicVision
@AuthenticChronicVision 13 сағат бұрын
Many are called. Few are chosen.
@JasonHarvey-tt2bi
@JasonHarvey-tt2bi 13 сағат бұрын
Although it was 100% stealth against American and European radar.. it showed up on Russian Radar it was shot down by a out dated soviet missile
@ThomasCole-uf7mt
@ThomasCole-uf7mt 13 сағат бұрын
As a Canadian I thank them an there families.
@danielocarey9392
@danielocarey9392 13 сағат бұрын
A very factual report. I like ones like this.
@McPh1741
@McPh1741 13 сағат бұрын
That would suck to go through all that training to become a Marine paratrooper only to be disbanded.
@cliffpurdom2966
@cliffpurdom2966 14 сағат бұрын
Great video's and very informative