How Did Germany DeNazify So Quickly After WWII

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  • @TodayIFoundOut
    @TodayIFoundOut26 күн бұрын

    The first 500 people to use this link and code TIFO25 will get 25% off their first subscription with Soylent: bit.ly/49o8mIs

  • @user-jc7bg8hh1w

    @user-jc7bg8hh1w

    26 күн бұрын

    You add reminds me of the movie " Green Soylent"

  • @twinmama42

    @twinmama42

    26 күн бұрын

    You know the secret behind "Soylent Green", do you? How can anyone name a product "Soylent" after the movie with Charlton Heston? Are they nuts? Never ever would I buy a product with this name! They could pay me and I wouldn't. No, disgusting, no.

  • @TodayIFoundOut

    @TodayIFoundOut

    26 күн бұрын

    @twinmama42 It's actually really good though. 😋 And totally made of plants, not people. 😘 -Daven

  • @twinmama42

    @twinmama42

    26 күн бұрын

    @@TodayIFoundOut That's all fine and good and maybe the company did it on purpose. But no, even if I was interested in the product itself, I could never try it - always thinking of euthanasia as a prerequisite for feeding the masses with recycled human remains. I don't blame you for taking the sponsorship, the product itself is totally fine, I guess. But I wonder about the (in)sanity of the minds behind it.

  • @Swm9445

    @Swm9445

    26 күн бұрын

    A) Fuck me the Tesla vs Edison script was 104 pages long B) I fucking love that the sponsors approve ad reads like this

  • @Martin_Koepl
    @Martin_Koepl26 күн бұрын

    As my grandfather once told me: Those who were the biggest Nazis out there were the first ones that got amnesia and weren't able to remember anything.

  • @tormentorxl2732

    @tormentorxl2732

    26 күн бұрын

    They took those disgusting nazi uniforms off so fast they got chafed. A clear sign of guilt for their crimes.

  • @calebbean1384

    @calebbean1384

    26 күн бұрын

    ​@@RubenLensvelt Nazis were neither Russian nor Communist. Weird take

  • @blakewisswell

    @blakewisswell

    26 күн бұрын

    @@calebbean1384 it's what closeted neo Nazis say.

  • @joshuagrahm3607

    @joshuagrahm3607

    26 күн бұрын

    Considering that like half of NATO‘s high command early on was just former third reich officers, yeah

  • @Martin_Koepl

    @Martin_Koepl

    26 күн бұрын

    ​@@joshuagrahm3607 Six years fighting a war, probably four years on the Eastern front fighting the Soviet Union, the were more than just qualified in commanding an alliance against the Soviet Union. And well, they for sure all had been Nazis, some more, others less, but well, those things tend to stop to matter when there is an imminent threat lurking behind a border.

  • @AnonymousBosch
    @AnonymousBosch26 күн бұрын

    I was in Germany in the late eighties, early nineties. For the older generation the difference between Nazi and non-Nazi was around six pints.

  • @corvus1374

    @corvus1374

    25 күн бұрын

    I was stationed in West Germany in the 70s, my roommate and I went to a bar one time and there was a table full of old guys. One of them came and sat with us and said, I love America, I was a prisoner of war in Texas!

  • @Rockthespaceship

    @Rockthespaceship

    24 күн бұрын

    🤣😂

  • @Hope_Boat

    @Hope_Boat

    24 күн бұрын

    Now it's being applauded or not by the Canadian house of representatives.

  • @unvergebeneid

    @unvergebeneid

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Hope_Boat I'm not a Canadian, what are you referring to?

  • @WarFoxThunder

    @WarFoxThunder

    24 күн бұрын

    💀

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean528020 күн бұрын

    My father was part of the American occupation of Germany in the postwar era, in the early 1960s (yeah, we were there a long time). He was fluent in several European languages, including German, so he could understand what Germans were saying around them when they thought he couldn't. He told me that denazification was a _failure_ , regardless of the propaganda messages back home in the states.

  • @DrOtto-sx7cp

    @DrOtto-sx7cp

    3 күн бұрын

    ... you're still there ! 🤣

  • @LegendStormcrow

    @LegendStormcrow

    2 күн бұрын

    ​@@DrOtto-sx7cpHaving a base and actively holding a country are different. I kind of think we should have held it tighter, or even had it become the new Israel, instead of taking the old one back for the Jews.

  • @illme3435

    @illme3435

    Күн бұрын

    might be a reaction to being colonized and humiliated by the US long after the war ended

  • @LegendStormcrow

    @LegendStormcrow

    Күн бұрын

    @@illme3435 You can't give them the high road after losing a war where they genocided 2 races of people.

  • @user-qo2lw5nr6t
    @user-qo2lw5nr6t6 күн бұрын

    Fast forward to 3:32 to skip the horrible in video advertisement.

  • @wabalaladabdab
    @wabalaladabdab24 күн бұрын

    "How did they denazify so quickly?" - easy, they didn't. With the few "Argentinian" exceptions, the rest of the nazis just went back to a civilian life, (many of them cops, judges, teaches, officials etc), and pretended that nothing happened here...

  • @Guido_XL

    @Guido_XL

    22 күн бұрын

    The entire "de-nazify" garbage is the result of an ongoing re-affirmation of a myth that the victorious Allies crafted to forge vanquished Germany into a compliant vasal ever since. The "re-education" program was intended to make the Germans believe it themselves, adopting it to a point that they would not need any exterior ruler to continue to believe. Present-day Germany is the most indoctrinated nation that ever existed. It is also the only nation that distorted its own historiography to its disadvantage.

  • @CalvinBDaG

    @CalvinBDaG

    21 күн бұрын

    Exactly what I said! Only difference is that I’m a 29yo Black American, that’s never once been to Germany ever.

  • @robertstorey7476

    @robertstorey7476

    21 күн бұрын

    Exactly right.

  • @Arbidarb

    @Arbidarb

    21 күн бұрын

    And no amount of shouting how antinazi they are is going to change it.

  • @squibbelsmcjohnson

    @squibbelsmcjohnson

    21 күн бұрын

    Then they got old and died and nazism slowly died out.. It's still their but 1% of what it was.. If that 😂

  • @Lockbar
    @Lockbar26 күн бұрын

    I was stationed in West Germany in the early 1970s. A running joke was "whats the difference between a German and an Austrian?" ..."The Germans use to be Nazis, and the Austrians still are."

  • @aka99

    @aka99

    25 күн бұрын

    Good joke, but true. Should be posted under every ww2 video.

  • @IslaSkye123

    @IslaSkye123

    24 күн бұрын

    💯💯💯

  • @kindseyvaughn8667

    @kindseyvaughn8667

    24 күн бұрын

    Like so true, not only did higher percentage or Austrians and Hungarians volunteer for the worst of the Nazi groups: SS and Gestapo, today both countries are far right and have openly racist policies.

  • @RafaelRodrigues-rx9ry

    @RafaelRodrigues-rx9ry

    24 күн бұрын

    😮 Never visiting Austria with my latin American skin.

  • @V3RTIGO222

    @V3RTIGO222

    24 күн бұрын

    @@RafaelRodrigues-rx9ry Don't take a statement of the time as a statement for today, besides it being a tad racist to apply to the general public. Arnold Swarzenegger of course is a good example of a famous Austrian known for being humanitarian and gregarious. Hungary's prime minister is hilariously somewhat aligned with Putin's communist Russia with Soviet aspirations, if that says anything about the implications of having facist and racist policy... but in any country that will be an unfortunate problem, even in America there are right wing nuts and left wing nuts that are all to comfortable with passing authoritarian policy to suppress their percieved enemies.

  • @Nickname-ef9tv
    @Nickname-ef9tv23 күн бұрын

    The pace of German denazification was slightly faster than Germany's birth and death rates.

  • @hectorsmommy1717
    @hectorsmommy171723 күн бұрын

    My friend was born in Germany in 1965 and came to the US in the late 80's after marrying a US soldier stationed there. We were talking about this and she said, as kids, they hated the annual "why the Nazi's were bad" unit in school. It was essentially the same information every year. A few of her family members had been members of the party. Some believed but most (according to them) joined because it was the only way to keep their jobs. Both her parents were in secondary school during the war. Neither joined the Hitler Youth so both were ostracized in their towns. The "all Germans were culpable" narrative was wrong, just as the "nobody knew what the Nazi's were doing" was also wrong. Her generation was tired of hearing about the Nazis and just wanted to live their lives.

  • @nelson-haha89

    @nelson-haha89

    23 күн бұрын

    I don't have a large amount of sympathy for students having to sit through a boring lecture. There are like 17 million people who wanted to just live their lives too that we didn't get to hear from.

  • @hectorsmommy1717

    @hectorsmommy1717

    23 күн бұрын

    @@nelson-haha89 She never said it was boring, she said they had to listen to lectures telling them that they caused the death of millions of people and the destruction of much of Europe just because they were German. Kids needed to know what happened and why, they did not need to be told they were the cause even though it happened 20 years before they were born.

  • @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    23 күн бұрын

    @@nelson-haha89fake

  • @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    23 күн бұрын

    @@nelson-haha89lies

  • @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    23 күн бұрын

    @@nelson-haha89you are pathetic

  • @lizgreer6888
    @lizgreer688824 күн бұрын

    A friend of ours at church was in the Luftwaffe. I had no idea until I was in my teens. To me they were the kind old people from Germany. As he said, he wanted nothing to do with the Nazis. One day officers came to his small village saying all men/boys of a certain age had to join. He quietly refused but his best friend openly refused. His friends entire family were shot and then hung up in the town center as a warning. So he joined, he crashed himself into a field, waited for the Americans to find him and was sent as a pow to the Midwest. He and his wife became very wealthy and gave most of their wealth to civil rights organizations. They said it was their moral duty to do the right thing.

  • @fromgermany271

    @fromgermany271

    24 күн бұрын

    Sometimes it’s not about doing the moral right thing, but just about survival. We had a lot of very left leaning people on tv shows in the 60s/70s/80s, who had the „pleasure“ to serve as soldiers (some just 16yo back then) and even a Bundeskanzler, who in today’s USA would be called a communist, who was an officer during WW2. It massively shaped his beliefs to being a servant fir the people. I can only tell you, I‘m happy I never had to live in these times and everyone (wherever ut is) who admires to get such a country is just evil or completely clueless.

  • @GG-un7hj

    @GG-un7hj

    24 күн бұрын

    I don’t doubt you believe it but that story sounds like 💯 % fantasy. If a kid refused to say join the Hitler Youth the nazis wouldn’t then kill the parents and siblings. I knew a German whose father refused to comply with their Euthanasia program. The nazis murdered his father in their backyard but allowed him, his siblings and their mother to live normally, so they could be “good nazis”, unlike their father. Interestingly, he ended up hating the nazis and moving to America never to return to Germany while his siblings and mother and relatives all stayed behind after the war, and they did still have pro- nazi views.

  • @noneyabizz8337

    @noneyabizz8337

    24 күн бұрын

    All that said, Hitler had HUGE rallies and was well loved(as long as they were winning).

  • @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    23 күн бұрын

    Cringe

  • @jaggg.3821

    @jaggg.3821

    23 күн бұрын

    Your families story should be made into a series only if your family story is picked up don't allow Hollywood to put their interpretation on your family story in what they believed they should of done in that situation. They did it with Jackie Robinson movie "42" and it was such an insult.

  • @piobmhor8529
    @piobmhor852924 күн бұрын

    I had a neighbour (passed away in 1998) who was a WW2 RCAF Navigator and former POW. He told us about his being shot down, his one and only parachute jump, capture and subsequent incarceration in a Luftstalag. He was caught up in a tree when a German Police Officer found him on patrol. He saw that his situation was fruitless and surrendered. He fully expected brutal treatment or summary execution, but instead received civility. The officer locked him up in their cells at the station, ensured he got a good meal and said in very broken English “for you the war is over, no worry”. He wasn’t turned over to the Gestapo, but rather the next morning a Luftwaffe guard and driver showed up to take him to a Stalag for questioning and incarceration. Life in the camps (he was moved a few times) was rough, but he survived and later liberated by the Russians. Upon return to Canada, he found civilian life rather boring and rejoined the RCAF. While stationed in Zweibrüken West Germany (not sure, but I think he said that) he started looking for the Police Officer who captured him. He found him, still a Police Officer in the same small town near Frankfurt. During the de-Nazification of the American Sector where he was, any Police Officer that had anything to do with the Nazi Party whether as a member of the Gestapo, ordinary member of the Party or even as a “willing participant” of Nazi atrocities were at least fired or had to stand trial. Complete Police Departments were rebuilt with new recruits, trained by mostly US Police Officers from scratch to become Peace Officers rather than enforcers of the political ideologies of the Führer. Being that he kept his job, that would mean that either he was one of the good ones, or he managed to squeeze through. My neighbour preferred to think it was the former because of the kindness he received. On a side note, the Police Officer told my neighbour that he still had the pistol he took from him upon capture, and if he wanted it back he could go home and get it for him. I guess he was required to turn it over to the Police Department, but I guess he slipped it into his coat as a souvenir, contrary to regulations. He probably took quite a risk keeping it after Germany’s surrender while the occupiers disarmed the local populace. Anyway, my neighbour said he could keep it. He thanked him for his kind treatment considering he was an enemy combatant. The de-Nazification of the police was definitely necessary to the reconstruction of the Federal Republic of Germany from the ashes of the Third Reich, but it must have been difficult with almost a 100% change of personnel.

  • @kyah.90

    @kyah.90

    23 күн бұрын

    That’s lovely! Could make a good book

  • @marcoaf18

    @marcoaf18

    23 күн бұрын

    Damn what a story!

  • @Guido_XL

    @Guido_XL

    23 күн бұрын

    Did you have the impression that this police officer was affected by Nazi ideology, whatever that may be? And what would that mean for a majority of the German people of the Third Reich? I believe that most of us are under the impression that the Third Reich was inhabited by Nazis and that almost no one could escape this. It is a distorted perception, as fueled by fictional depictions from novels, movies and even documentaries. Germans were not that easily affected by any ideology, just as most other people aren't. But, they dealt with the conditions of their times, as all people do. "De-nazification" is a term that emanated from the Allied policy, as created by psychological warfare deliberations. It assumes that people can and will be hypnotised by some ideology that is being imposed upon them somehow. It's a myth that most of us came to accept at face value. The Germans after 1945 did not have to be "de-nazified" any more than the people of the GDR needed to "de-sovietized" after 1990.

  • @Potent_Techmology

    @Potent_Techmology

    23 күн бұрын

    Germans hate Slavs and Poles especially.... Poles and Jews were one and the same before the war and Germany succeeded in separating Jews from Polish culture/society. WWII was a continuation of the Germanization of Polish lands in Germanic efforts of hegemony.

  • @piobmhor8529

    @piobmhor8529

    22 күн бұрын

    @@Guido_XL from the description of the Police Officer my neighbour gave me, he did describe him as an older man, perhaps in his 50s. This might have a lot to do with his apparent immunity to Nazi doctrine.

  • @I_dont_need_a_handle
    @I_dont_need_a_handle14 күн бұрын

    "How did Germany de-nazifiy so quickly" They didn't. The trick was to act like never having been a nazi and you good to go. It went a little like this: A: "Are you a nazi?" B: "Me? No." A: "Sir, you are still wearing the uniform." B: "Oh that thing. Those are just my work-clothes." A: "What is your work?" B: "Administrative stuff." A: "What do you administer?" B: "Showers" A: "Thank you. You are clearly not a Nazi. Here is your Persilschein." ... A: " Sir. Wait! Do you want a Job? We still need administers for the newly found intelligence agency."

  • @juerdprinsen9327

    @juerdprinsen9327

    7 күн бұрын

    And the newly founded intelligence office was headed and founded by former nazi generalleutenant and intelligence officer of the eastern front, reinhard gehlen. The west simply adopted nazis and wiped their records to employ them in the war against communism, because if there is one thing nazis hated almost the same amount as jews its communists and that is a large handshake moment with the western allied powers.

  • @johnclark1925
    @johnclark192520 күн бұрын

    They took off their SS uniforms, put on their civilian suits and went to work as usual.

  • @c.j.nyssen6987
    @c.j.nyssen698725 күн бұрын

    Soylent blocked me on Twitter for tweeting "Soylent Green is people! PEOPLE!" Glad to see someone in the marketing devision finally developed a sense of humour.

  • @danieldavis2292

    @danieldavis2292

    16 күн бұрын

    Bro I literally came here for this comment! Soylent Green is a people!

  • @HulasShoupe

    @HulasShoupe

    15 күн бұрын

    I was going to say that

  • @Godfearing-Atheist

    @Godfearing-Atheist

    9 күн бұрын

    The bottle has a nutritionist in it. 😂

  • @Adiscretefirm
    @Adiscretefirm26 күн бұрын

    My favorite de-Nazi effort is how they made replacement medals for veterans so they could wear the no swastika version at reunions and parades. The silliest was that the band Kiss had to change their logo because the lightning bolt S was too close to the SS symbol and was banned

  • @M_SC

    @M_SC

    26 күн бұрын

    The second part of your comment is unrelated to the first and is stupid

  • @greenockscatman

    @greenockscatman

    26 күн бұрын

    @@M_SC you seem well adjusted

  • @Adiscretefirm

    @Adiscretefirm

    26 күн бұрын

    @@M_SC not related when both refer to symbols banned during the denazification program. Besides being a knob, your reading comprehension is atrocious. Read some books, visual media has made you stupid

  • @flecx9767

    @flecx9767

    26 күн бұрын

    The most stupid part of de-nazification is banning license plates with letters that could somehow be related to the Nazis. Some people had actually have to pay fines because their state issued license plate (which has the persons initials in them) contained comsidered letters.

  • @Adiscretefirm

    @Adiscretefirm

    26 күн бұрын

    @@M_SC banned symbol, another banned symbol. Not related?

  • @Evs78101
    @Evs7810120 күн бұрын

    Whole country just swept it under the rug, smh…. Take responsibility… the entire country was complicit… those that didn’t fight back or leave,

  • @loislewis5229

    @loislewis5229

    3 күн бұрын

    The people of Germany took heavy responsibility for both of the World Wars. It was devastating

  • @rrmordikay

    @rrmordikay

    2 күн бұрын

    Germany did take responsibility, following generations have been saved from giving in to the nazi-rhetoric very effectively and real nazis (as in fuhrer believers etc. and anti-semites without muslim backgrounds) are a supremely rare thing in germany. Apart from that there is not a lot a country can do to "take responsibilty". What would you have them do? Kill the entire populace ? Maybe ransack the country to the point of putting it back to the iron age (the soviets did that partially under cover of reparations in their sector)? Or maybe help them back on their feet, have them see their mistakes and become a successful economy and respected member of the world community? That last one worked out quiet well for Germany and the world as a whole.

  • @IceMan-rz8hw
    @IceMan-rz8hw9 күн бұрын

    Me: *reads the title* „Well, we didn’t“ *looks at the news* „Seems more like , we gonna try it again“

  • @MrPrussianjester

    @MrPrussianjester

    6 күн бұрын

    Underrated comment. Comments also prove this.

  • @imanightmare3017

    @imanightmare3017

    2 күн бұрын

    Same

  • @TheMeritCoba
    @TheMeritCoba26 күн бұрын

    I recall that in my country, the Netherlands, the number of those who were accused of collaborating with the Germans ran into the hundred thousand on a populace of six million. Given that the country was devastated by the war, it was found to be next to impossible to prosecute every person, especially since some of those accused were high-ranking officials needed to run the country. A lot of people who deserved punishment likely escaped it.

  • @solokom

    @solokom

    24 күн бұрын

    Same as in Germany. If justice stands against practicability, it's always the latter that wins.

  • @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    23 күн бұрын

    @@solokom”justice”

  • @kayleighgroenendal8473

    @kayleighgroenendal8473

    23 күн бұрын

    I'm always curious cuz my dad's family moved here from the Netherlands in 1951 when he was a 6 month old baby. I wonder if they were secretly on the bad side. My dad always says they help Jews hide during the war, but he also says Dutch people aren't that racist so I don't think he really knows 😅

  • @nephlimjedi4741

    @nephlimjedi4741

    22 күн бұрын

    @@kayleighgroenendal8473 There were collaborators in every country, whether they believed the ideology or they were just trying to save their own skins. But then there were people like my maternal grandmother's parents, who hid Jews in their farms. An entire nation cannot be classified as good or bad, not even the nation who instigates the conflict.

  • @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    @punishedgloyperstormtroope8098

    22 күн бұрын

    @@kayleighgroenendal8473 “bad side”? You mean the communists, British and Americans?

  • @klti0815
    @klti081526 күн бұрын

    The Auschwitz trials in 1960 (the only real attampt to get justice for what happened in the camps until decades later) really only happened because of the district attorney of Frankfurt, Fritz Bauer. He was a fascinating figure, being in exile during the nazi years, and probably on of the few high ranking figures in the justice system that actually were clean. He formed a small group of young prosecutors, and they essentially worked in isolation from the rest of his office because a lot of them had vivid nazi pasts. It got to the point where he thought the Telex machines in his office were bugged, so he used the one in the vegetable wholesaler across the street. If the Auschwitz trials and Fritz Bauer don't already have Videos in the Whistler KZread universe, they should really have one. Some of the witness testimony from the first trial is absolutely heartbreaking, I'll never forget the one where an older survivor of the camp laments the death of a young boy, the desperation and shock in his voice is just heartbreaking.

  • @tremorsfan

    @tremorsfan

    24 күн бұрын

    Wasn't there a movie about that?

  • @tubensalat1453

    @tubensalat1453

    24 күн бұрын

    Fritz Bauer definitely deserves credit. The judicial system is a part where the denazification was especially poor. They just attested each other that everything they did was legal and kept going. Over all there was a 2/3 continuation from the third Reich to the Western German system, at the highest national court it was even 3/4.

  • @Jen1N.
    @Jen1N.23 күн бұрын

    I appreciate that you made this knowing you’d make nothing off of it. It’s important to have accurate information out there about subjects like this.

  • @JonasReichert1992
    @JonasReichert199213 күн бұрын

    Hint: it didn’t. Thousands of Nazis later worked in Governments in Ministries in intelligence Services and in the Police. And obviously everywhere else too.

  • @iamryan767

    @iamryan767

    3 күн бұрын

    What

  • @JonasReichert1992

    @JonasReichert1992

    3 күн бұрын

    @@iamryan767 Germany didn’t denazify quickly after the War. They worked in all kinds of Places years after the War

  • @andromidius
    @andromidius26 күн бұрын

    Turns out that having actual consequences to their actions was a powerful motivator to at least be quiet about it and lay low.

  • @duelde-consulting6403

    @duelde-consulting6403

    23 күн бұрын

    Most went to america. Hitler had a family that served in the US Navy.

  • @Potent_Techmology

    @Potent_Techmology

    23 күн бұрын

    Germans hate Slavs and Poles especially.... Poles and Jews were one and the same before the war and Germany succeeded in separating Jews from Polish culture/society. WWII was a continuation of the Germanization of Polish lands in Germanic efforts of hegemony.

  • @kinngrimm

    @kinngrimm

    22 күн бұрын

    Something that had been missing at times in modern times or lets say in my lived memory since the 1990s here in germany and so it was no surprise we got of that old shit nowadays again, well and Steve Bannon spreading his culture war bullshit to fringe right parties here in europe also did not help. That asshole should be banned from ever entering europe again.

  • @andrewshepherd1633

    @andrewshepherd1633

    22 күн бұрын

    ​@@duelde-consulting6403 that particular family branch hated what Hitler was doing and his nephew was the one who fought against him in the US Navy to show just how against him they were.

  • @oblitusunum6979

    @oblitusunum6979

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@duelde-consulting6403I believe he likely went to south America with a lot of the nonpaperclip national socialists

  • @jblob5764
    @jblob576426 күн бұрын

    "soylent is plants... SOYLENT IS PLANTS" 😂😂😂

  • @phillip6083

    @phillip6083

    26 күн бұрын

    Hmmm.tastes good.... Is that a finger?

  • @burbanpoison2494

    @burbanpoison2494

    26 күн бұрын

    That's what they said in the movie...

  • @rodziegman

    @rodziegman

    26 күн бұрын

    Yeah, you don't use that name and try that hard if it's legit plants. 😂

  • @thumpyloudfoot864

    @thumpyloudfoot864

    26 күн бұрын

    This was very hilariously bad timing, that caught me so off guard, I inhaled my drink like literally went down the wrong tube, I just gave myself a "pulmonary JD&C" and then it exploded out of my nose LOL... I don't have anything to compare this feeling to, probably because I've never died before LOL I joke, but that was very unpleasant... LOL

  • @SpectralAI

    @SpectralAI

    26 күн бұрын

    It’s just plants. Trust me. 😊

  • @bettysanborn1991
    @bettysanborn19919 күн бұрын

    They didn't de-nazify. My sister had a woman boss who immigrated here after World War 2. That woman was a mean nasty old woman. Many of the older generation that came here after world war 2 hung onto their Nazi beliefs until the day they died AS I believe this woman did too. The ones I met were cold no nonsense people. I was told that after the war Germans created coffee houses or beer houses (I don't know what they're called) all over their country expressly so they could go there to hang onto their Nazi beliefs. I can't imagine being born in 1933 and all you hear as your growing up is Nazi ideology. How could you think any other way? Your thinking would be set. To change a lifetime of thinking like that would be difficult.

  • @buy_large_mansions
    @buy_large_mansions20 күн бұрын

    There were plenty of slave owners in the American North in the 1700s and also 1800s.

  • @frannypalmer2726

    @frannypalmer2726

    19 күн бұрын

    There has always been slavery. It's still in lots of places. Not just North America.

  • @buy_large_mansions

    @buy_large_mansions

    19 күн бұрын

    @@frannypalmer2726 yes, I think there are more slaves now than at any time in history.

  • @hancocki
    @hancocki26 күн бұрын

    I was all set to skip through the sponsor spot and then... "plant murder." Now I'm invested.

  • @Potent_Techmology

    @Potent_Techmology

    23 күн бұрын

    Germans hate Slavs and Poles especially.... Poles and Jews were one and the same before the war and Germany succeeded in separating Jews from Polish culture/society. WWII was a continuation of the Germanization of Polish lands in Germanic efforts of hegemony.

  • @BoatyMsBoatface

    @BoatyMsBoatface

    22 күн бұрын

    lol- same for me

  • @AG-ld6rv

    @AG-ld6rv

    21 күн бұрын

    People who have a following, whether they want it or not, are leaders of people. There is nothing more disgusting than a leader of people accepting money in exchange for giving marketers access to their following. They unleash manipulators upon their following some of which trust the judgment of their leader. I'll never understand people who wink and are like, "I get it man, make your money." All you're doing is projecting you would make the same immoral decisions this dude did if you ever became popular to others. From a classist point of view, it's like an Egyptian slave making the pyramids being like, "Yeah, the pharaoh is awesome abusing his place in society like this." It's Stockholm syndrome. Allegedly rare but happens to entire populations who are deluded. This kind of stuff manifests all the time in America toward businessmen doing pretty much anything that is legal to make money. "Wow, that's smart! Oh, so much profit." ... uhh why are you idolizing businessmen that are abusing you, the customer, especially when you're not even the one in the same class to abuse other classes. A serf glorifying the king rather than criticizing him. Absolute badness and madness.

  • @hancocki

    @hancocki

    21 күн бұрын

    @@AG-ld6rv dude, all I was saying was that I became more intrigued and open to listening to the sponsorship pitch through the clever use of word play. I still had no intention of buying the product, but felt the entertainment of it would be worth the extra time. Getting all philosophical and navel-gazey on the intersection of audience captivity and content creator financial realities is certainly within your rights but I have to wonder... did you type that out in the moment or have that ready to go just to copy and paste in?

  • @AG-ld6rv

    @AG-ld6rv

    20 күн бұрын

    @@hancocki> dude, all I was saying was that I became more intrigued and open to listening to the sponsorship pitch through the clever use of word play. I still had no intention of buying the product, but felt the entertainment of it would be worth the extra time. Marketing isn't about entertainment. It is about convincing people to make decisions that may not be the best for themselves. There is zero reason to idolize businessmen hiring marketing employees hellbent on manipulating a chunk of the population to do things that, if they understood everything, would not make that decision. > Getting all philosophical and navel-gazey As a general rule, I've found people who try to insult others for thinking tend to support bad things. Here, it's marketing and allowing others to manipulate your followers when you are a leader. Other times, it's graver situations that deal with how nations treat their people and other nations. > Getting all philosophic [ .. ] on the intersection of audience captivity and content creator financial realities is certainly within your rights but I have to wonder... did you type that out in the moment or have that ready to go just to copy and paste in? I'm writing stuff that is in my head. There are no two comments that I make that are the same. You can phrase it as philosophically as you want, but at the end of the day, it is wrong to take money in exchange for the manipulation of people that trust you as a leader. This is common sense unless you're a psychopath or a sociopath that has been taught to love abuse dished out by businesses.

  • @gasad01374
    @gasad0137420 күн бұрын

    Simple answer, they didn’t. They just went back to civilian life and pretended like they had no part in it.

  • @alcidesprieto1967
    @alcidesprieto196723 күн бұрын

    Nazi officers escaped to South America, nazi scientists moved to North America and the nazi foot soldiers just got amnesia.

  • @alexdaland
    @alexdaland26 күн бұрын

    During the add, Simon has way to much hair, and not nearly enough beard... Im starting to suspect it might wasnt?! Another poor soul in Simons dungeon forced to work

  • @zurielsss

    @zurielsss

    26 күн бұрын

    But we learnt there is a 6 hr video coming up about Tesla and Edison

  • @aceundead4750

    @aceundead4750

    26 күн бұрын

    That was Daven, he has connections to the lizard overlords allegedly, and thus Simon was forced to let him out of the basement. Daven's actually the owner and founder of TIFO..

  • @tubensalat1453

    @tubensalat1453

    24 күн бұрын

    @@aceundead4750 Oh, that guy got a name? I just thought Simon be outsourcing the ad reads now.

  • @KingAlanI
    @KingAlanI26 күн бұрын

    Trouble is that after regime change you need to tolerate some people who worked for the old government to have enough competent civil servants to run the new government (blanket bans were a problem in 2003 Iraq for a counterexample)

  • @markostevanovic4119

    @markostevanovic4119

    26 күн бұрын

    That may be, but what is the message to the world, if the companys who destroyed Europe are now the richtest in germany? Germany lost, the Nazis won, yeah some died and some where persecuted, but that happend unser the Nazis too, just ask the SA. Germany was treated so mildly after the war, so the loser of war faired much better than many of it's victims and germans believe it's because even our woman work 2times hardes then anyone.

  • @elfrad1714
    @elfrad17143 күн бұрын

    I am reminded of a history professor at a Canadian university where I studied who used the terms 'de-nazification' and re-nazification'. Accordingly, once the Cold War began the western allies realized that old Nazis were also good anti-communists and hence many found their way back into positions of power. One prominent example is Hans Filbinger. He was a naval judge who in the dying days of the war signed up on the executions of so-called deserters. Filbinger later became state premier of Baden-Württemberg, a German Bundesland.

  • @Zodia195
    @Zodia19522 күн бұрын

    My great-grandma was German. Her family was anti-Hitler. Unfortunately they were still forced to send family members to join the German Army or bad things would happen to the family. My great-grandpa was in the American Army during WWI and afterwards his job was to watch over the small German town my great-grandma was in. Keep in mind this is late 1910s, Hilter wasn't even in power yet. My 2-times great-grandpa must have had great intuition because he feared Hitler and asked my great-grandpa to marry one of his daughters so he would know one of his children was safe in America. He picked my great-grandma. My Nana and great-grandma would send letters and packages back to her family throughout the war. My own great-grandma never spoke out in public because of just how wary Americans were of Germans during that time. So knowing all that my family went through, it's why I tell people a good way to make me mad is to talk bad about them. Like in HS one guy I knew found out I had German ancestry and called me a Nazi to my face and boy did I give him a good tongue lashing. He apologized thankfully. I wish I could have known my great-grandma but she died when I was a baby. Thankful to have a 4 generations picture of her though. My mom loves talking about her and how great of a person she was. I wish I could have asked my own Nana about her, but I was 12 when my Nana passed away from Cancer. It should be noted though my great-grandma's family made it out all right in the end. My Nana got to meet her German relatives when my family lived in Germany for a few years when I was a baby. My dad's an Air Force vet. Apparently my family got lost a few times trying to find the small German town lol. But we had a wonderful time, even with the language issues (my Nana and dad knew a little German thankfully). I was only a year old, but I was a major hit there lol. I still hope to go back there one day since I don't remember.

  • @Zenas521
    @Zenas52124 күн бұрын

    Simon, your iron grip is slipping. One of the dungeon monkeys got out of its cell and appeared in front of the camera. It told us we should really try the same prison food they get. Then mentioned something about plant murder...

  • @parkourmovementspkm2292
    @parkourmovementspkm229226 күн бұрын

    This is one of the funnier ads I’ve seen here on YT. Next ad blink SOS in Morse code if you need help 😂

  • @erinmac4750

    @erinmac4750

    25 күн бұрын

    That's hilarious! 😹

  • @Warrior0fDoom

    @Warrior0fDoom

    24 күн бұрын

    Lololol agreed 😅

  • @personzorz

    @personzorz

    24 күн бұрын

    I was on the forum that the founder of Soylent was on as he invented it. Good God, he's a messed up man.

  • @CGingRun

    @CGingRun

    24 күн бұрын

    Do y'all not know the Lore??

  • @RogerRabbit342

    @RogerRabbit342

    24 күн бұрын

    @@CGingRunno

  • @Soujirou13
    @Soujirou1323 күн бұрын

    Years ago I wondered who Daven was.... ...now I'm just impressed with the killer sponsor ad-spot; I didn't even skip it. Well delivered. :P

  • @coachmullen1
    @coachmullen121 күн бұрын

    Nice Ichiro bobblehead in the embedded advertisement! Are you all based out of Seattle? If so, do you ever do any public events? It would be kinda cool to see an in-person presentation and get to ask questions.

  • @TodayIFoundOut

    @TodayIFoundOut

    7 күн бұрын

    I live in Bellingham. :-) In person events might be fun sometime. :-) -Daven

  • @cloudyskies3937
    @cloudyskies393726 күн бұрын

    We didn't, which was the reason for the rightful anger of the kids-generation of the wartime generation in the late 1960s. Without them, little would have ever even been researched/prosecuted or taught in schools.

  • @GG-un7hj

    @GG-un7hj

    24 күн бұрын

    That may be the best and most succinct answer I’ve seen here.

  • @Arbidarb

    @Arbidarb

    21 күн бұрын

    All Germany has managed to do is slap a different color of paint on the same machine.

  • @oblitusunum6979

    @oblitusunum6979

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@Arbidarb yeah, Germany and Austria literally created the SS again in 2020 under the claim they were going to hunt down the unvaccinated "to give them a fine". Seriously go look it up

  • @AngryDad.

    @AngryDad.

    20 күн бұрын

    Lol and now look what Germany has become 😂

  • @ilovejettrooper5922

    @ilovejettrooper5922

    19 күн бұрын

    @cloudyskies3937 Can you run that by me again with some additional context and clarity??

  • @apolovillalobos5250
    @apolovillalobos525024 күн бұрын

    Something that is easily and eagerly omitted is the fact that a big chunk of Germans hated the Nazis, but kept it really quiet because of the Gestapo. Also, many Germans were absorbed into the respective bureaucracies because they had little choice (the army being one such bureaucracy).

  • @Marcel_Audubon

    @Marcel_Audubon

    18 күн бұрын

    not buying that - the Germans were the Nazis and the Nazis were the Germans - very few Germans didn't support the Nazis, although they all pretended to have "hated" them after the war

  • @CCBTL

    @CCBTL

    17 күн бұрын

    Well yeah, the ones with the guns are usually the scary ones **cough cough*** government.

  • @I_dont_need_a_handle

    @I_dont_need_a_handle

    14 күн бұрын

    Maybe, but the bigger chunk were indifferent or fans of the NSDAP. That's what populism, porpaganda and mass-hysteria does to you.

  • @PUARockstar

    @PUARockstar

    8 күн бұрын

    @@I_dont_need_a_handle this

  • @SarahsSnakeShop
    @SarahsSnakeShop2 күн бұрын

    Idk who decided that "Soylent" would be a good brand name, but I genuinely think they should rethink it.

  • @eucitizen78
    @eucitizen7823 күн бұрын

    Germany was not really denazified. When the first Chancellor of the Bundesrepublik Deutschland , Konrad Adenauer was asked why there are so many Nazis in his administration he answered: (quote) " No one throws away dirty water as long as he has no clean water."

  • @ericsilver9401
    @ericsilver940126 күн бұрын

    24:32 “The soviets acted relatively chill,” caught me off guard lol

  • @charlottealexander2329

    @charlottealexander2329

    24 күн бұрын

    The Soviets were anything but chill. They insisted on the Nuremburg trials. Not surprising given that they lost 20 million people.

  • @user-xu5vl5th9n

    @user-xu5vl5th9n

    23 күн бұрын

    Stalin suggesting killing them all. Some thought he was joking, but he wasn't joking at all.

  • @Snagprophet

    @Snagprophet

    23 күн бұрын

    They just slapped "Communist" onto them and said "you no Nazi now"

  • @janhurst544

    @janhurst544

    23 күн бұрын

    Of course the Nazis were chill to white guys. Why they didn’t just make these Germans kiss a Jewish persons feet to find the Nazis I will never know.

  • @666Kaca

    @666Kaca

    22 күн бұрын

    @@charlottealexander2329 27 million russians. Add onto that 13 million polish(6 of which were polish jews) and you kinda understand them

  • @seb24789
    @seb2478925 күн бұрын

    Lemme tell you as someone from rural Germany: A lot of places have a "late easter celebration" today (April 20th. You can guess why?) at that one bar where the cops won't show up.

  • @Martin_Koepl

    @Martin_Koepl

    25 күн бұрын

    Let me guess, they serve "Eiernockerln"

  • @seb24789

    @seb24789

    25 күн бұрын

    @@Martin_Koepl Ich hoffe mal du bist nicht in Bayern. Sonst muss ich dich leider für illegales gendern melden.

  • @gregturner1947

    @gregturner1947

    25 күн бұрын

    Führergeburtstag ceased to be a national holiday after 1945. Unfortunately, some sad individuals still mark the day.

  • @dx5018

    @dx5018

    24 күн бұрын

    Wo kommst du her? Ich habe das mein ganzes Leben lang nicht gehört, und ich bin fast 60 Jahre alt

  • @personzorz

    @personzorz

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@dx5018 consider yourself accomplished in your choice of friends

  • @Jack_Simpson
    @Jack_Simpson22 күн бұрын

    My mom was an MP at Checkpoint Charlie during the final years of the wall being up. She said the only folks always denied knowledge of what was happening and always tried to avoid the subject when possible.

  • @Martinarmonica
    @Martinarmonica20 күн бұрын

    There's a joke here in Chile, regarding the arrival of nazi defectors to South America. It says: "don't ask a lady for her age, don't ask a man for his salary, and don't ask your southern friend what did his german grandpa do between 1938 and 1945"

  • @Xithar_tri
    @Xithar_tri26 күн бұрын

    I'm German, too, and even though many here say it didn't work, it kind of did, at least for some generations. Of course, that doesn't mean there weren't Nazis, just that there weren't too many. For some decades a big part of political partys and I think also of the people did shift views more to the middle and so for many Germans, the denazification worked. I would even still guess that most people here aren't nationalistic at all. Before you ask, why not nationalistic? Simple, because the main way to denazify the later generations was to lower nationalism and to make a feeling of some shame about the past an integral part of our school teaching. However, especially after the reunification of Germany, the extreme right wing in politics and with it the Nazis became stronger again, and the more groups of people felt betrayed by the normal parties, the stronger the right wing became. Or ok, first it was most parties expect the two biggest, which became stronger but over the years more parts shifted to the right. Nowadays, especially but not only in the eastern states, the AFD is the second most popular party. In the beginning they may have been "just" a right-wing party but over the last 13 years most of the politicians who weren't on the far right side left that party, and today large parts of it are Nazis in all but name. Long story short, history tends to repeat itself, it would have been nice if people could have learned from the terrible past just once.

  • @animn7386

    @animn7386

    26 күн бұрын

    People lost their taste for it after learning of holocaust; bothers me that it's like nobody's willing to admit that and they just blamed over and over again

  • @cynthiaherbst3909

    @cynthiaherbst3909

    26 күн бұрын

    I think people underestimate the effect that reunification had in kind of rekindling some nazi ideations and the culpability of the Soviet Union in that. When they set up the GDR they fully leaned into nationalism and the aesthetic of the Wermacht in all but the Swatikas even down to recreating an Afrika Korps and it was no accident that the USSR set up East Germany as a revanchist land mind.

  • @markostevanovic4119

    @markostevanovic4119

    26 күн бұрын

    Reunification was a symptom of nationalism over antifascism. Germany was devided to make sure fascism wouldn't rise again. Reunification was the Germany deciding themselfs that german unitiy was more important than "never again".

  • @kf8228

    @kf8228

    24 күн бұрын

    Nobody seems to give a sh… about the AfD nationalist nonsense. It’s a one trick pony. Stop mass immigration and the AfD fades into nothingness. When they were merely against the Euro, they were a joke. Got less than 5% of the vote. It was Merkels’ failed immigration policy of 2015 that got them into the parliament in 2017. Merkel is to blame for Brexit and the AfD. Close the EU borders.

  • @ezbody

    @ezbody

    24 күн бұрын

    It's not all about being influenced by ideologies. About 30% of the population are on a spectrum of antisocial personality traits, and Nazi ideology just fits their personality.

  • @DerM0H
    @DerM0H26 күн бұрын

    German here, as it turns out the last few years, this didn't work very well

  • @mwi3865

    @mwi3865

    26 күн бұрын

    Seems they did when your being invaded by the middle east. Merkel ruined your country

  • @decgal81

    @decgal81

    26 күн бұрын

    Cuz the actual N@zis went to the Americas :/

  • @LDam-pf6lx

    @LDam-pf6lx

    26 күн бұрын

    Well, Merkel and her ilk helped fuel that fire. "Wir schaffen das".

  • @qazhr

    @qazhr

    26 күн бұрын

    Prove it that it really is rise of Nazis again not people wanting their country from globalist who rather flood the country with outside who will not integrate with the country . On of that your left side makes that scream pointing out he bad consequences of what we are doing is hate speech

  • @cadamwil

    @cadamwil

    26 күн бұрын

    I’m not completely confident in that. That said, I think there’s always people who will think pushing down or kicking someone who’s already down makes them stronger/richer/more powerful, when all is does is demonstrate the opposite. Also, I’m not confident that at least some of the problems in the West aren’t funded and encouraged by the East.

  • @christophecamus3295
    @christophecamus329523 күн бұрын

    Interesting and eye opening vidéo. Thanks

  • @allesklar221
    @allesklar22113 күн бұрын

    Simple, my grandfather just changed his uniform and the patches, and worked as a customs officer

  • @tormentorxl2732
    @tormentorxl273226 күн бұрын

    The fact that they took off these nazi uniforms so fast and ran like scared rabbits , when they saw the end coming, is a testament to how guilty they were inside.

  • @arabelletessa1420

    @arabelletessa1420

    26 күн бұрын

    Or they were not into it that much. It's not as if they had a choice to be there.

  • @animn7386

    @animn7386

    26 күн бұрын

    Most people in Nazi party weren't real believers the Nazi party was an actual poliitcal party; many had to join who didn't believe orctheir careers were over

  • @Squat5000

    @Squat5000

    26 күн бұрын

    More likely they realized that the Jews were going to continue their genocide of Western Christians

  • @ObscuredByCloud

    @ObscuredByCloud

    26 күн бұрын

    Or maybe they saw what the Russians and British were doing to Nazis.

  • @SoMuchFacepalm

    @SoMuchFacepalm

    26 күн бұрын

    Or they believed propaganda that told them the Germans were going to be exterminated by the Allies. You know, a similar line to the one the leadership had been using to motivate and justify (to themselves) the H?

  • @chknoodle2324
    @chknoodle232426 күн бұрын

    32:45

  • @flailingweasel8541
    @flailingweasel85419 күн бұрын

    Soylent on my youtube ads is wild. Never touched the stuff but one of my old bosses drank it for like every meal we're convinced

  • @004Black
    @004Black24 күн бұрын

    My Opa (grandfather) was conscripted into the German army in 1943 and sent to the Russian front. Miraculously, he survived. After allied victory, he walked home. Home was a hamlet near Miltenberg Am Main. It took him 19 months to finally stumble into the arms of my Oma and their eight children. Nearly the entire population of the village had rejected the dogma of the nationalist socialist government and were so elated to see Oskar return, they threw a party! Post war was beyond belief. My mother and her sisters were put into a “fat camp” and forced to eat unfamiliar foods. Although well-meaning, some of the food was repugnant including peas that had a petroleum tinge and chicken that made the children sick. My mother wrote a memoir retelling some of the struggles but through the eyes of a child and this video aligns with her stories.

  • @michaelrupprecht5997

    @michaelrupprecht5997

    23 күн бұрын

    Bin aus Rippberg =) =) =)

  • @user-rv2zj8zu5b

    @user-rv2zj8zu5b

    21 күн бұрын

    Similar story with my Opa. Off to the eastern front - lost a leg.

  • @Marcel_Audubon

    @Marcel_Audubon

    18 күн бұрын

    yeah, they ALL lived in villages the rejected the dogma of the Nazis ... after the war

  • @user-rv2zj8zu5b

    @user-rv2zj8zu5b

    17 күн бұрын

    @@Marcel_Audubon read your history - there were lots of people who did not support Naziism. Just like ALL Americans support Trump - right? Your sarcasm is rather silly

  • @Marcel_Audubon

    @Marcel_Audubon

    17 күн бұрын

    @@user-rv2zj8zu5b You offer a telling example ... Americans who didn't support Trump rejected him at the polls and turned him out of office ... Germans who didn't support Naziism cowered in the corner without a peep because they were afraid of losing their nazi sponsored jobs. "Although I'm heading to the Nazi rally wearing a Nazi armband and might loot a synagogue on the way, let history show that deep, deep down, I really didn't support them!" doesn't really cut it

  • @SittingOnEdgeman
    @SittingOnEdgeman26 күн бұрын

    I can't help but feel like for most common people denazification only required showing them the films of what the allies discovered at the camps. The horror of knowing you helped foster something like that would live with you the rest of your days.

  • @amandamotekaityte5681

    @amandamotekaityte5681

    24 күн бұрын

    Many people knew and chose to act like it is not happening

  • @personzorz

    @personzorz

    24 күн бұрын

    You'd be surprised

  • @Pavlos_Charalambous

    @Pavlos_Charalambous

    24 күн бұрын

    Ofc people knew about the camps don't be silly Many worked alongside the slaves and ofc they saw them dying from mistreatment Those columns of " zebras" as they call them was passing through their towns and dropping dead all over the place Soldiers was writing about their actions to their relatives Don't reproduce cold warvmyths

  • @nienke7713

    @nienke7713

    24 күн бұрын

    People tend to prefer to believe that information that contradicts their views is false rather than changing their beliefs. If they supported the Nazis, showing that likely wasn't enough, if they didn't support the Nazis, they didn't need to be denazified.

  • @stephengraham1153

    @stephengraham1153

    23 күн бұрын

    "The horror of knowing you helped foster something like that" Pity that Russians don't feel the same about the Katyn Forest massacres. Maybe then they wouldn't have been so keen to invade Ukraine.

  • @endebtedone
    @endebtedone13 күн бұрын

    🤯🤯🤯🤯 as usual so much information that the brain is straining to comprehend a lot of it. amazing work as always.

  • @dlo111
    @dlo11121 күн бұрын

    Hahaha! Love the sponser ad! Well done using the writer-in-basement trope from The CC. 😅

  • @rbilleaud
    @rbilleaud26 күн бұрын

    You need to do a video on the Battle of Castle Itter where Wehrmacht troops fought alongside French, American and British POWs against S.S. troops to liberate the camp. Fascinating stuff.

  • @aka99

    @aka99

    25 күн бұрын

    Mark did a vid about it

  • @-Letgos-
    @-Letgos-26 күн бұрын

    They didn't. They just became politicians and scientists under operation paperclip.

  • @MrSniperfox29

    @MrSniperfox29

    26 күн бұрын

    Ah, but they weren't in Germany anymore

  • @AldrickExGladius

    @AldrickExGladius

    26 күн бұрын

    @@MrSniperfox29 or Nazi's.... technically.

  • @legbert123

    @legbert123

    26 күн бұрын

    Ya all 125 of them were the totality of the Nazi party.

  • @wombatdk

    @wombatdk

    26 күн бұрын

    @@MrSniperfox29 Wrong. German politicians, judges and police after WW2 where overwhelmingly staunch Nazis. In fact, to this day they still are. It was even worse in the eastern part of Germany, where Wehrmacht officers carried on like nothing happened, rebuilding the GDR military with the Orcs blessing. To this day, many military bases are named after Nazi war heroes.

  • @ashleyashcraft1754

    @ashleyashcraft1754

    26 күн бұрын

    Kinda like the white men of the US ... sure, in the constitution all men are created equal but that's not how it is practiced in society or government - especially if you are Jewish or African American. It's disgusting. I get it when humans are emotional creatures and lash out at a person or community member because of something that they did or didn't do- but to outright deny that these "other" people are people regardless of how one feels about them is disgusting and I don't understand it at all. It's not the norm, I realize, but it's also very much more present than it should be.

  • @stevethom4329
    @stevethom432922 күн бұрын

    Having worked in Germany and knowing a few folk once a few beers were in them. It was never cleansed. It was forgotten, hushed up and not spoken about. People still believe and follow.

  • @Kaotiqua
    @Kaotiqua22 күн бұрын

    Daven deserves an extra ration of Soylent for his above-and-beyond sponser-read. Bravo!

  • @bigedslobotomy
    @bigedslobotomy26 күн бұрын

    There were many Germans who actively supported the Nazis regime, but there were also many who didn’t dare speak up or act against them out of fear for their safety, and the safety of their family. Many tried to retreat into their family life, but Hitler made sure that they couldn’t escape even in their own houses when he instituted the Nazis youth programs. The German secret police were as ruthless in acting against any hint of dissent as they were against anyone with a drop of Jewish blood in their family tree. Because it would be extremely hard to differentiate between a passive supporter and an active supporter (and would purge their society of the skills needed to rebuild after the war), it seems that only the most visible leaders in the Nazis regime were prosecuted.

  • @rickscott8756

    @rickscott8756

    26 күн бұрын

    That and how much extra death and destruction came from Hitler's refusal to surrender. I bet that got a lot of people to have pretty strong second thoughts about the Third Reich.

  • @Martin_Koepl

    @Martin_Koepl

    25 күн бұрын

    The majority of all Germans back then was actually actively supporting the Nazi Regime. Not just many. And it was not the German secret police that was hunting down people for doing things like a saying "Scheiß Hitler" when drunk, it was your jealous neighbor that made sure that you end up in prison or in a concentration camp for doing things like that. And that extremely hard to differentiate between active and passive supporter, nope, not been that way. They just couldn't imprison all active supporters because they were too many, society wouldn't have been able to function afterwards, so they let them go.

  • @Martin_Koepl

    @Martin_Koepl

    25 күн бұрын

    Not many, most Germans actively supported the Nazi regime. And nope, not the secret police was hunting down people that were against the regime, it were mostly neighbors sending neighbors into prison or into death camps: Partly because they actually said something against the regime, most likely when drunk and partly to get rid of them, because their place looked nicer, or similar pointless things. And well, it had been that many active supporters, that if they would have imprisoned them all, society wouldn't have been able to function anymore. That is the reason why they went free.

  • @marcusmelville4111

    @marcusmelville4111

    25 күн бұрын

    It's weird how parallel the societies of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia were, yet both were sworn enemies, and one is openly celebrated today without recourse.

  • @dangeary2134

    @dangeary2134

    25 күн бұрын

    They took most of their ideas from the Democrat’s play book from before the Civil War. They actually had to dial it back a few notches…

  • @elforeigner3260
    @elforeigner326025 күн бұрын

    In 1945 all Germans were anti-Nazis as in 1944 all French were Resistants 😂😂😂

  • @malegria9641

    @malegria9641

    21 күн бұрын

    Don’t ever make that fucking comparison again, my great grandfather fought for the free French in North Africa just for a fucking American to deny his accomplishments?

  • @AlEcyler
    @AlEcyler18 күн бұрын

    I did not expect a Soylent sponsorship! Well done everyone.

  • @AlexMig
    @AlexMig8 күн бұрын

    This video being sponsored by Soylent is crazy 💀

  • @seeratlasdtyria4584
    @seeratlasdtyria458426 күн бұрын

    What makes you think they did? Many decades ago, I was in Germany for a Business Meeting with a corporate affiliate. That night I was invited to a meal at my host's home. To sum up. NONE of his 4 children (3 sons, ranging from perhaps 15 to 10 or so, and one daughter about 8, EVER spoke, despite having been ordered/'asked' to fetch something or remove a plate etc. His wife remained seated at his side but slightly back from the table and spoke ONLY when she was asked to speak by her husband. I am from the American West and needless to say, I was astonished at the whole experience (the food WAS exceptionally good though :) Upon inquiry, I was later informed by my father (the CO-CHAIRMAN of the corporation, that my host had been a devout member of the NAZI YOUTH organization (I have forgotten its exact name), and that he was his most efficient manager in Europe.

  • @zurielsss

    @zurielsss

    26 күн бұрын

    Yea, you don’t wash off that upbringing so easily I bet those babies are of the of ideal looks too

  • @animn7386

    @animn7386

    26 күн бұрын

    It has more to do with a natural German aloofness; if they don't know you that well family wont speak; if they knew you better you would've had a more normal experience

  • @user-wp2wi1hb7y

    @user-wp2wi1hb7y

    26 күн бұрын

    Yeah, it seems odd to me that you'd find that odd. In my personal experience as a kid in Romania, for example, if someone came to visit, we would be expected to shut our mouths also. The adults would barage us with silly questions and compliments on the other hand, as per custom, and we were expected to engage in the conversation if solicited. It was more a thing of kids being expected to refrain themselves from being chaotic and disturbing the guests, not some authoritarian abuse - etiquette, you know... Also, the visiting adult was also supposed to bring at least some sweets or snacks for the kids. Not doing so was one of the biggest signs of rudeness and bad manners and it was seen as so shameful by everyone involved that kids with conscious parents we're trained to not ask 'what did you bring us?' as a form of salute ( kids did this precisely because every visit meant an automatic 'slap on the mouth', as folks joked; thus, it was a form of salute when close family visited and a taboo question when strangers visited). It happened, more and more often, during the '80s and '90s that people could simply not afford sweets, in which case you'd hear your parents lament the poor soul after leaving : 'poor X, he couldn't even afford a candy. You see, kids , how much worse it could get? Be grateful that at least you're not starving, like others!'

  • @seeratlasdtyria4584

    @seeratlasdtyria4584

    26 күн бұрын

    @@user-wp2wi1hb7y I hear you, literally world's difference in background. When I say I'm from the U.S "West" I mean the "OLD WEST" :) Grew up in the high mtns of Colorado- bout 7k elevation. Because my father was a for real 'Rocket Scientist', during the Cold War, I didn''t really get to see him much and since we lived in a "Black Area" i.e. not on any map, there weren't a lot of kids around to play with so my brother and I roamed the mountains, sometimes not coming back for 2 or 3 days (I was 8-9, he was was just under 2years older). Anyway, what I wanted to tell you, was I was one of the first Americans to get un restricted, behind the "Iron Curtain"- because the Russians et. al. thought I was an Italian student at the time. I rode all over the place on a Big Ducati 900, which no one behind the block had ever seen so, I caused a LOT of commotion in the remote places I liked to visit. Relevant to you, one of my fav's was Romania:) I used to pick the smaller of the roads at each intersection and would eventually get waaaaay out into the remote villages. JESUS, that wine/liquor/ whatever it was knocked my socks off LOL, and I could DRINK:). Outside of a few intemperate Border Guards, I found your villagers, initially reserved and suspicious but when I arrived in a small village right as the doors to the church opened revealing pretty much everyone within miles celebrating a new couple's marriage, the experience was one of the most treasured of my life. I had recently returned from Damascus and was carrying an intricately carved and elegantly ornate little jewelry box intended as a gift for a girlfriend. Well, when the assembled villagers froze at the sight of me all dressed in black leather on the biggest black motorcycle they had ever seen, well I asked in Italian if they were celebrating a wedding. One healthy looking fellow (ready to f ight:) nodded so I fished the gift wrapped box out and motioned for one of the young men to approach and then give the box to the bride:) When she opened it, everyone crowded in to give it a look over and were amazed at what they saw..well, ice broken, international relationships established , we proceeded to party..To this day, I remember only a blur until I woke up in a barn, with a bunch of guys , and with one hell of a hangover:) Cold War be damned :)

  • @user-wp2wi1hb7y

    @user-wp2wi1hb7y

    25 күн бұрын

    @@seeratlasdtyria4584 that's one hell of a life you've lived :) btw, if you drank that in Romania, then it was Țuică (read it like 'tzooi-kuh' ). It's made from prunes (usually, apple pears or cherry are also options) and in one of the regions, Ardeal, they always distilled it twice, so that it has a 68% alcohol content. In the winter time, during holidays, it is served hot and mixed with sugar (they call it crampă). Two of those small little glasses (you'd be served a 'deț' [detz]) and you're already drunk. The fact that in my region, at least, they used to heat the homes during winter times up to 30 something degrees, as a sign of being a good host and also a flex of sorts, proving that you can afford not minding about the wood, well that didn't help keeping one sober. Then one would finish the visit and had to leave the neighbours, meeting the outside, -20C weather by nightfall.

  • @ashleyashcraft1754
    @ashleyashcraft175426 күн бұрын

    I know there are a lot of opinions and "on paper" versus "in practice" comments moving to the contrary of the title of this video, but I appreciate you guys putting this video out. It is only briefly covered in our public education in the US. WW2 is highly covered, but denazification is barely touched on. I watch a lot of documentaries about WW2 regarding survivor stories, etc. However, I'm also interested from the soldier perspective and citizen perspective. I personally find much less information and stories about this than of any other angle that is covered about the Holocaust. In fact, it wasnt until the past few years, did I even learn any reasons about what else was happening in the world and why Japan bombed the US when the US hadnt engaged directly or officially in WW2 until then and then we went to Europe. It never made sense why Japan just bombed us and then we went east instead of west - because that is what we were taught / what i remember from history in school.

  • @mcpossum
    @mcpossum22 күн бұрын

    LIFE magazine ran an editorial in a late 1946 issue about the US's "Denazification" process. Was interesting

  • @Dreamscape195
    @Dreamscape19523 күн бұрын

    I was so surprised by the cut to a writer for the sponsor (+basement mentions) that I watched the whole thing

  • @Bobblenob
    @Bobblenob25 күн бұрын

    As a 18 yo apprentice in the UK army we visited Belsen. 20 of us from the same college crying our eyes out.

  • @kingcockroach.

    @kingcockroach.

    23 күн бұрын

    I would love to go places, i was offered to go to see some concentrationcamps. But i couldnt. Im crying and spluttering at photos, i tried to watch a digital tour and was blubbering.

  • @Guido_XL

    @Guido_XL

    22 күн бұрын

    And yet, Bergen-Belsen was not a so-called "death" camp. Is it not striking that the only so-called "death" camps were all within the Soviet-controlled areas after WWII? The heaps of emaciated bodies were shoveled together by the British, by the way. Did they tell you that? After the liberation, the inmates were not allowed to leave, as there still was an epidemic that was not supposed to reach the outside world. Probably more inmates died there after the liberation than before. In the last months of the war, Bergen-Belsen became increasingly burdened with more and more inmates from the Eastern concentration camps, while the Red Army advanced. The constant bombardments depleted the potable water supplies, the food and medicine stocks. That caused the eventually devastating epidemics in Bergen-Belsen. It is typical for the narrative to abuse the case of Bergen-Belsen as an alleged example of a "death" camp. The Western Allies never saw Auschwitz-Birkenau, Treblinka, Majdanek and all the other alleged "death" camps. The British liberated Bergen-Belsen and the Americans Buchenwald. None of those Western concentration camps were labeled "death" camps afterwards, once the initial rumours were debunked. "Strangely", that debunking never happened to the Eastern camps.

  • @alecmullaney7957

    @alecmullaney7957

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@Guido_XL the holocaust happened. It was evil. You need to learn this.

  • @jonhill7081

    @jonhill7081

    20 күн бұрын

    @@Guido_XL You should to out and visit Auschwitz & Birkenau. Go see the gas chambers and furnaces for yourself. Then think about what you mean when you talk about "debunking"

  • @zapre2284

    @zapre2284

    15 күн бұрын

    You believe in fairy tales. Poor you

  • @KMO325
    @KMO32525 күн бұрын

    Basically the effort to de-Nazify Germany worked as well as the effort to de-Confederatize the American south after the Civil War. The current trends in both countries show the great success of this.

  • @coreysanders7140

    @coreysanders7140

    23 күн бұрын

    AmeriKKKa still has statues of Confederates, and people display the flag. Germany leaned, and AmeriKKKa didn't. AmeriKKKa whitewashed its history.

  • @lollorosso4675

    @lollorosso4675

    22 күн бұрын

    While I agree that the current state of German politics is a poor testament to denazification, this still is to be viewed in the context of a broader nationalist trend worldwide. Compared to the UK, the US, Italy, France, Austria and others, Germany is still quite tame as far as the reach of nationalist ideology into the populus is concerned. Not to relativize any of this as harmless, just to provide some frame of reference. There are other nations - above all the USA - that we should be much more worried about than Germany.

  • @KomradeKrusher

    @KomradeKrusher

    18 күн бұрын

    While I agree that initial de-nazification was mostly lip-service, the student protest of 1968 actually helped shift the country further left and forced a more public and open debate about Nazi Germany and people's roles in it. The greatest problems with a resurgence of far right politics in Germany are - ironically enough - in the former GDR states.

  • @bisurker
    @bisurker24 күн бұрын

    I see the channel is moving towards a "Some More News" type of vibe with those ads. 😂

  • @DKSorg
    @DKSorg22 сағат бұрын

    #1970 Dad was deployed to Checkpoint Charlie as a British Tankie. - He saw 25 years later many still wearing their Jack Boots, PROUDLY. #1980s - I bounced on the knee of an Iron Cross German Officer, my grandma and him were close.

  • @Ohana9999
    @Ohana999926 күн бұрын

    As a German let me just tell you. It's because we didn't lmaoooo😭😭😭

  • @josephgarcia4302

    @josephgarcia4302

    26 күн бұрын

    This foo the tourism in ur country would be like going to north korea lmaoo

  • @nodiggity9472

    @nodiggity9472

    26 күн бұрын

    Hush Fritz

  • @kittycatwithinternetaccess2356

    @kittycatwithinternetaccess2356

    26 күн бұрын

    how did it not happen?

  • @Martin_Koepl

    @Martin_Koepl

    26 күн бұрын

    As an Austrian, I came here to say the same. Without even watching the video.

  • @Martin_Koepl

    @Martin_Koepl

    26 күн бұрын

    @@kittycatwithinternetaccess2356 Because you can't nuke more than half of your population.

  • @napstablook1999
    @napstablook199926 күн бұрын

    Only read the title and was immediately entranced. This is the type of thing that’s awesome to learn about! Thanks Simon! (And the writers of course lol)

  • @debras3806
    @debras380621 күн бұрын

    By exporting them to USA. And Brazil. There. Saved us both a half hour!

  • @willisengelbrecht7731
    @willisengelbrecht773123 күн бұрын

    I don't think I've ever wanted to watch a sponsored segment before 😂😂

  • @Garcea_linking
    @Garcea_linking26 күн бұрын

    Newsflash-They did not

  • @animn7386

    @animn7386

    26 күн бұрын

    They did thr moment they learned about the holocaust; don't be deceitful

  • @louisesumrell6331
    @louisesumrell633126 күн бұрын

    "Soylent Green"? Seriously? 😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @langbo9999

    @langbo9999

    26 күн бұрын

    Are we sure about it not made of people.?

  • @Berserk_Knight

    @Berserk_Knight

    25 күн бұрын

    @@langbo9999 The flavor label for Green suggests it's made of Mint Chocolate lovers. I'm *definitely* not having that one under any circumstances. 🤣

  • @margaretgalicia6367

    @margaretgalicia6367

    24 күн бұрын

    if you are interested the Dollop did a pod cast on it kzread.info/dash/bejne/g42VyNyBhd2wndY.html

  • @HalasterBlackmantle
    @HalasterBlackmantle23 күн бұрын

    Everything about this Soylent stuff is hardcore dystopian. Blink "SOS" if you're taken hostage.

  • @Michael-bc3es

    @Michael-bc3es

    12 күн бұрын

    I just love how the green flavor has that meaty flavor. Idk how they get a plant product to taste like delicious steak in a bottle

  • @MegaVero23
    @MegaVero2313 күн бұрын

    Some of their top dogs were given jobs running N A T O

  • @ba-gg6jo
    @ba-gg6jo26 күн бұрын

    It really was an example of collective amnesia by the perpetrators and bystander amnesia by the majority of ordinary Germans. The most amazing success was Austria turning themselves into victims, when frankly they supplied more war criminals based on SS records. Roughly speaking, though around only 10% of the SS were Austrian they represented nearly 50% of the war criminals.

  • @WhiteThunder121
    @WhiteThunder12126 күн бұрын

    "How Did Germany DeNazify So Quickly After WWII" That's the neat part. We didn't.

  • @kittycatwithinternetaccess2356

    @kittycatwithinternetaccess2356

    26 күн бұрын

    so youre still nazis?

  • @AldrickExGladius

    @AldrickExGladius

    26 күн бұрын

    super neat 🤨

  • @legbert123

    @legbert123

    26 күн бұрын

    Are you German? Is it a big part of your country still? Because out of 83 million people in Germany today how many are Nazi?

  • @krillin6

    @krillin6

    26 күн бұрын

    I hope you aren't one.

  • @wombatdk

    @wombatdk

    26 күн бұрын

    @@krillin6 ALL Germans are. Look at German news and you'll very quickly realize that nothing changed since then. Nothing at all.

  • @666Kaca
    @666Kaca22 күн бұрын

    They didnt. About 62% of germans thought the nvzi party was good in 1955, it wasnt until the mid 60s and 70s that they started turning around because the economy was picking up once again

  • @emtffzartman666
    @emtffzartman66620 күн бұрын

    The commercial bothered me… not that you have sponsors, but Soylent?? Let me guess they have a Soylent Green? Anyone else see that movie??

  • @frannypalmer2726

    @frannypalmer2726

    19 күн бұрын

    It's people.

  • @mp6814
    @mp681426 күн бұрын

    But did they?... Are you sure? Here are some facts... After World War II, there were some former Nazis who became part of the post-war German government. Notable examples include: - Walter Scheel, who became President of Germany in 1974, and Kurt Georg Kiesinger, who served as Chancellor from 1966 to 1969. Both were members of the Nazi Party during the war. - Hans Globke, a high-ranking official in the post-war German government, who played a significant role in drafting antisemitic Nuremberg Race Laws in Nazi Germany. These individuals, and others like them, were part of a complex and controversial process of Denazification that aimed to rid German society of Nazi ideology. However, the presence of former Nazis in post-war German government was a source of ongoing debate and controversy.

  • @ClarenceFlanagan
    @ClarenceFlanagan26 күн бұрын

    They all got sanctuary in America via Operation Paperclip?

  • @IKilledEarl
    @IKilledEarl26 күн бұрын

    My grandfather was a German soldier and came to the US with my grandmother and my newborn aunt after the war. I can tell you that "denazification" looked nice and official on paper, but German citizens didn't just stop being Nazis. My grandparents were mentally 100% Nazi, even if they couldn't admit it in polite society. They moved to Ohio and my grandfather was the Bier Chairman of the German American Festival. They only ever spoke with other Germans, went to German grocery stores, did business with other Germans, and kept their German citizenship despite living in the US full time. My grandmother didn't become an American citizen until after my grandfather died in the early 90s because he forbid it and she was a good little house frau that did as she was told. They were both hateful, bigoted, elitist, and nationalistic until they day they died. Denazification in the manner it was described here is a myth. The only way for an idiology to die is for the original holders to die and take it with them. It took a long time for my dad to deconstruct most of the beliefs he was raised to accept. And I do mean a long time. I was in my mid 20s before I could see a change in his opinions about various groups and switched from Republican to Democrat. It can be done, but it takes multiple generations and a lot of gentle re-education.

  • @paulpaintshop103

    @paulpaintshop103

    26 күн бұрын

    He should have stayed Republican, Dems are the new Nazi's

  • @paigetomkinson1137

    @paigetomkinson1137

    26 күн бұрын

    This was fascinating, thanks for sharing it. Were either of your grandparents members of the NSDAP? I'm just curious. Good for your dad that he figured it all out!

  • @IKilledEarl

    @IKilledEarl

    26 күн бұрын

    @@paigetomkinson1137 I have no idea. My grandfather died suddenly when I was about 8 and didn't talk about the war to a little kid. My grandmother played rummy with me and talked about her time as a ballet dancer (I did ballet until I was 20). She died when I was 12. Neither of them spoke English very well, so communicating with them was difficult. I distinctly remember my grandmother writing "shiken" (chicken) on a grocery list, which I found hilarious. I knew very little about them except how terribly they treated my mother and how hatefully they talked about everyone except other Germans. I'd love to sit my dad down and discuss more of their history with me so I have a better understanding of who they were as people. But I get the feeling that even he didn't know much about his parents. Neither of them was very warm and fuzzy in terms of their parenting or grandparenting style. The house was always perfectly ordered and clean (and we weren't allowed to touch anything), and my grandmother made the same 7 meals her whole life because my grandfather was a tyrant who wanted it that way. But picking my dad's brain would still be very interesting, as I find WW2 a fascinating subject.

  • @paigetomkinson1137

    @paigetomkinson1137

    25 күн бұрын

    @@IKilledEarl The story of your family is fascinating! It must have been weird to go to your grandparent's house. Good luck with trying to find out more from your dad! Thank you for sharing your memories and knowledge.

  • @Zandain

    @Zandain

    25 күн бұрын

    I think that singular people/families who left Germany after WW2, probably kept their political beliefs for a longer time, than Germany & the general public did. Being part of a 'hoard' makes you a bit of a lemming and public speaking, school education and an a official political party, would be schuss-ed. Within a family, I can imagine your grandparents kept their specific beliefs, 'alive'. As a Dane, there were harsh treatments and penalties for Danes, who had pro-Nazi politics after WW2. Executions and public humiliations were the norm. Now, they are banned by law and do not fall under 'free speech' as they are deemed 'hate speech' & call for violence.

  • @VinIchiban
    @VinIchiban19 күн бұрын

    I just had some Soylent. I order it off Amazon in bulk. Definitely helps with calorie rationing.

  • @tslfrontman
    @tslfrontman20 күн бұрын

    To bring back something I haven't heard said since 2002; that advertisement was bunk 😂

  • @liloulux2739
    @liloulux273926 күн бұрын

    I am very German. We are very pragmatic people. My grandparents generation saw the tide turning and it was beneficial in anyway not to be a Nazi anymore, so they stopped being Nazis. It is THAT simple.

  • @WaddedBliss

    @WaddedBliss

    26 күн бұрын

    It's a point Joseph Heller makes in Catch-22 when Yossarian is speaking to the old Italian man.

  • @Noneofyourbusiness_.I._

    @Noneofyourbusiness_.I._

    24 күн бұрын

    You need to reclaim your country.

  • @noneyabizz8337

    @noneyabizz8337

    24 күн бұрын

    Didn't stop believing, simply stopped expressing.

  • @user-sd3ik9rt6d

    @user-sd3ik9rt6d

    23 күн бұрын

    If you commit murder because you can and it was the easiest way to hide among other murders then you are a murderer and always a murderer. If you ignore murder then you are a murderer.

  • @willichtenstein7071

    @willichtenstein7071

    23 күн бұрын

    WoW if only every criminal could be like, ya I used to do crimes but when I saw those police lights I stopped being a criminal. It is THAT simple. I mean why even have a justice system if people are THAT pragmatic.

  • @Shauma_llama
    @Shauma_llama26 күн бұрын

    Don't skip the ad. It's not typical ad copy. 😅

  • @personzorz

    @personzorz

    24 күн бұрын

    I was on the web forum that the founder of Soylent was on when he invented it. Good God he's a weirdo and is really, really mentally messed up.

  • @rickwrites2612
    @rickwrites261223 күн бұрын

    Speaking of postwar Gernan legal system, LGBT ppl rescued from Nazi camps were put in prison to serve out sentences, even though LGBT had been legal in pre-Nazi (Weimar) Germany. But it was still illegal in Allied nations (US, UK, USSR), therefore it was now illegal in both East and West Germany.

  • @bobgall6764
    @bobgall676422 күн бұрын

    An ad for Soylent???😳 I want Edward G. Robinson flavor!😂

  • @johnfoxsmith2077
    @johnfoxsmith207726 күн бұрын

    Of course the one time Simon let's his writer's out of the basement, is to make him money on an ad. Simon, you cruel cruel man 😂

  • @aumshiva4527

    @aumshiva4527

    25 күн бұрын

    I was thinking the same 😅😂

  • @anneloving8405
    @anneloving840520 күн бұрын

    They went to Switzerland and South America,joined forces with billionaires and became the WEF.

  • @michaels4255

    @michaels4255

    18 күн бұрын

    No. WEF is the opposite of NS.

  • @R4MON
    @R4MON23 күн бұрын

    The ad read was comedy gold! 😂😂😂

  • @jimcappa6815
    @jimcappa681526 күн бұрын

    I don't always watch the ad reads (sorry not sorry) but this one was.very entertaining! Thanks, Daven!

  • @sisterlaylahashe
    @sisterlaylahashe26 күн бұрын

    Im glad youre letting the writers out to get some camera time! And you let them shower first!

  • @clivescott3932
    @clivescott393221 күн бұрын

    The question is not "How Did Germany DeNazify So Quickly?" but "Why was it such a success, given how badly it was implemented?"

  • @KomradeKrusher
    @KomradeKrusher18 күн бұрын

    The answer might surprise you: We didn't, really. That's how the student revolts of 1968 and the Red Army Fraction happened.

  • @ThousandManx
    @ThousandManx26 күн бұрын

    Lmao that Sergeant taking down the street sign is hilarious

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