Member Insider: Bespoke Bodies
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Liberty Memorial Tower
1:50
4 ай бұрын
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@Guitarman973
@Guitarman973 Күн бұрын
Here Horlice-Tarnow Offensive was called the most successive battle of The Eastern Front. How about Faustschlag?
@Guitarman973
@Guitarman973 Күн бұрын
It is interesting to watch how researchers accentuate on ethnic and linguistical diversity of A-H and at the same time doesn't pay atention to russian empire which was even more diverse. It is clear that russians doesn't give a fuck to all peoples of their empire. But come on if A-H paid attention to that issue then they had less problems with that issue. And by the way only thing A-H soldier must know were 80 German words to understand commands. So don't make the big deal out of that matter More to say people in multiethnical/multicultural regions which were in A-H deal with each other pretty well. So why they couldn't get along if they put them in uniform? A-H army was formed on territiorial basis. People from the same region became the part of the same formation at least at the start of the war A-H had defincies and disadvantages byt that was not one of them How about colonial soldiers of France or Britain. They all knew English or French? How all that non-French troops on Western Front were coordinated with each other and with French?
@Guitarman973
@Guitarman973 Күн бұрын
Keep the audio not too loud and that video would be great thing to sleep
@robward8247
@robward8247 2 күн бұрын
this is very good
@dirtydieselguy
@dirtydieselguy 2 күн бұрын
History doesn't repeat, it rhymes, is an excellent point of view
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 2 күн бұрын
Excellent presentation! I loved to see all the old photos and newspaper clippings. Well done.
@pamhewitt6553
@pamhewitt6553 4 күн бұрын
My paternal grandfather, Thomas M. Hewitt, jr. Was a a member of the Original Lafayette Escadrille 😎
@NDRonin1401
@NDRonin1401 4 күн бұрын
At a good 12 minutes in, I'm really curious if the speaker is actually going to give any decent argumentation for his categoric statement that imperialism was NOT one of, if not THE main (hehe) reason for WW1. I am however not feeling very confident he will, seeing as he followed that up with the statement that nationalism was not at all a reason for the soldiers to go into war and die for their nation/country. That is just totally irrelevant to the point, namely the causes of WW1. As if however the soldiers felt had any influence on the people making the decision to go to war, the same people who set up the whole tangled web of alliances that made conflict almost impossible to avoid. And also the very same people who created, maintained and benefitted from their respective empires, and who consequently absolutely refused to let go of it, no matter how many millions they had to send to the abattoir. The sentiments, political convictions and willingness of the common man has no place in this discussion, and using it as an argument to support your point is intellectually dishonest, not to say completely ridiculous.
@ralphbernhard1757
@ralphbernhard1757 5 күн бұрын
The USA has only always gained greatly by setting up a world in which others fail. The faster the rest of the world realizes this, the better. *Washington DC power mongers employ the divide and rule technique of power.* In the past, and as one of the Big Three at Versailles, they covertly set up Europe for failure, masked behind overt expressions of "fighting for freedom and democracy." In reality, Versailles was a covert implementation of the divide and rule technique. _Europe was divided, with a ruling._ This strategy is often misunderstood, in narratives composed mostly of "being friends" or "being rivals/enemies", even though it only means that one can gain greatly if others are divided and fail. It _is_ as simple as that. "Friends" or "enemies" play no role: if others fail, the own systems gain. After Europe failed, the final domino stone Washington DC actively toppled was the British Empire. After two world wars, with countless emerging struggles in the colonies, so by 1945 the already seriously weakened and overextended Great Britain was an easy pushover... When Europe failed, as all states fought to mutual exhaustion, who gained most? From "Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire." -- Michael Hudson, 2nd edition 2003 "What actually occurred was that Britain and other countries became hopelessly indebted to the United States once again (edit: during World War 2) ... “We have profited by our past mistakes,” announced Roosevelt in a speech delivered on September 3, 1942. “This time we shall know how to make full use of victory.” This time the U.S. Government would conquer its allies in a more enlightened manner, by demanding economic concessions of a legal and political nature instead of futilely seeking repayment of its wartime loans (of World War 1). The new postwar strategy sought and secured foreign markets for U.S. exports, and new fields for American investment capital in Europe’s raw materials producing colonial areas. Despite Roosevelt’s assurances to the contrary, Britain was compelled, under the Lend-Lease agreements and the terms of the first great U.S. postwar loan to Britain, to relinquish Empire Preference and to open all its markets to U.S. competition, at a time when Britain desperately needed these markets as a means by which to fund its sterling debt. Most important of all, Britain was forced to unblock its sterling and foreign-exchange balances built up by its colonies and other Sterling Area countries during the wartime years. Instead of the Allied Powers as a whole bearing the costs of these wartime credits to British Empire countries, they would be borne by Britain itself. Equally important, they would not be used as “blocked” balances that could be used only to buy British or other Sterling Area exports, but would be freed to purchase exports from any nation. Under postwar conditions this meant that they would be used in large part to purchase U.S. exports. (page 115/116) By relinquishing its right to block these balances, Britain gave up its option, while enabling the United States to make full use of its gold stock as the basis for postwar lending to purchased generalized (primarily U.S.) exports. At a stroke, Britain’s economic power was broken. What Germany as foe had been unable to accomplish in two wars against Britain, the United States accomplished with ease as its ally.(Page 117) Furthermore, under the terms on which it joined the International Monetary Fund, Britain could not devalue the pound sterling so as to dissipate the foreign-exchange value of these balances. Its liability thus was maximized - and so was America’s gain from the pool of liquidity that these balances now represented." (end of) *Only ONE attribute decides whether a system is THE DIVIDER, or becomes a part of "the divided": POWER.* After 1945 London was turned from its role of "divider of the world" into the role of "one of the divided" (the role of FAVORITE junior partner, the "peaceful handover of power" and related "special relationship"-narrative. "Special"-relationship in a power balance. These Washington DC power mongers must be rotfl...) Whatever... If your state or nation is "not at the table," you are "lunch" (Anthony Blinken). The dividers telling everybody in no uncertain terms, that their interests and even their lives don't count. *There is no doubt that Washington DC is attempting to repeat this "success" (pov) in the rising powers of Asia. The strategy can be observed to be implemented in the same way as was set up post-1900 in Europe, but in Europe the "buck catchers" (John Mearsheimer theory) were Great Britain and France. Today, it is India being used in the same role as France was 100 years ago. In case of a wider war in Asia, as India is set up against China, qui bono if _all_ lose?* The technique Washington DC employed up to the year 2000, is an almost exact repeat of the technique they used to overpower Europe around the year 1900: DIVIDE AND RULE. Divide and rule *creates* all that follows in its wake: 1) The terrorist. 2) The state of terror. 3) The terror state.
@NDRonin1401
@NDRonin1401 5 күн бұрын
The comparison of numbers of victims of atrocities on the eastern front with those in France and Belgium around 33:00 ... Although the speaker said the numbers in the west are not to be bagatelised, that IS kind of what you do when you simply state that the victim numbers in the east were at least tenfold. I'm quite convinced that when you set off total victim numbers against total population and square miles of the area in which those numbers occured, you will find the atrocity victims in the west at least on par with the east, if not higher because of higher concentration of incidents. Anyhow, a very enjoyable presentation.
@rockytoptom
@rockytoptom 7 күн бұрын
I wonder why the dirigibles were never used on the British fleet....?
@ivybridge4054
@ivybridge4054 8 күн бұрын
You did make a great presentation; however, you unfortunately must be a little mitigated in your acceptance of youtube comments because whether or not Chris Clark or even as extreme as Ferguson are 'right', they would never get support becuase the comments here are really representations like Fox or CNN about views people had before they even listened to a point of view. I listened to Sir ____who I cannot remember acknowledge his bias before speaking and multiple times was against yet respectful towards mcmeekin. Thank you as a presenter for not pandering to the people who see what they want. Thank you for showing that the doves became hawks in a moment was not ideology but the Machiavellian blood and iron. But above all, thank you for showing that historians can be passionate but unbias
@rockytoptom
@rockytoptom 8 күн бұрын
I love this episode. Dr. Stone is great and the topic is one of my favorites.
@Chesirecat111
@Chesirecat111 9 күн бұрын
I believe the Archduke’s driver had trouble turning around when the wrong turn was realized because the car DIDN’T have a reverse gear.
@waterboy181
@waterboy181 9 күн бұрын
Chris you were amazing. You will be missed.
@rockytoptom
@rockytoptom 9 күн бұрын
This guy has a lot of opinions that's for sure. He may be the worst lecturer chosen for this entire channel.
@viggowiin
@viggowiin 9 күн бұрын
Great lecture
@bonetiredtoo
@bonetiredtoo 10 күн бұрын
‘The German Fleet has assaulted its jailer, but it is still in jail.’ A famous quote but sums up Jutland perfectly. A couple of other points which are worth mentioning. In English Law dead men can't sue so I suspect that any attempt to sue for reputational damage would fail. Secondly, and this is pertinent to the US, a key thing that happened after the US declaration of war in April 1917 is the sending of Battleship Division Nine to Scapa in Nov 1917. That added four dreadnaughts to the strength of the Grand Fleet ...
@viggowiin
@viggowiin 10 күн бұрын
Great lecture
@viggowiin
@viggowiin 10 күн бұрын
Great lecture
@rockytoptom
@rockytoptom 11 күн бұрын
I knew about the big names in this lecture but this was very informative. Very well done. This is one of the most informative lectures in the entire channel
@MsBlue007007
@MsBlue007007 11 күн бұрын
Music is about telling a story
@ovadyadisrael9126
@ovadyadisrael9126 12 күн бұрын
I'm from Jerusalem Israel. Originally from San Francisco California
@chrispygalactic
@chrispygalactic 12 күн бұрын
Thank you. Great lecture.
@prophetic0311
@prophetic0311 13 күн бұрын
Thank Mr skeltal
@rickjensen2717
@rickjensen2717 13 күн бұрын
The treaty was the biggest cock up in modern times!
@ralphbernhard1757
@ralphbernhard1757 5 күн бұрын
No, it was intentional. It was divide and rule. A divide and rule strategy must be unfair, in order to divide people.
@jasonpalacios1363
@jasonpalacios1363 14 күн бұрын
WWI started out pure ego and WWII started out pure evil.
@charliebrownie4158
@charliebrownie4158 15 күн бұрын
And again today they are doing the exact same thing again with the war between Iran, Arabians, Turkish, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Russia against Israel, the Turks are trying to destroy Armenia again.
@charliebrownie4158
@charliebrownie4158 15 күн бұрын
I am not Armenian nor do I have family who have married into the people. But I stand with them and I pay them homage to the great evil that was done to them. And even today the same people are doing the exact same thing again. How many more will be destroyed?
@WARdROBEPlaysWWII
@WARdROBEPlaysWWII 15 күн бұрын
2:19 I know it’s not ideal, but these virtual experiences allow many people to see great knowledge like this. Thank you.
@cpawp
@cpawp 15 күн бұрын
A stalemate - questionable. Germany could not change the blockade, the strategic situation remained unchanged, but by counts of men and ships lost Scheer won that battle, sry. Plse do not mix the tactical outcome of a battle and he strategic situation of a war. Otherwise you have to declare the bloody defeat at the Somme as a victory as well. Battle lost for the Brits - not by far a decisive loss for them neither a decisive win for Kaiser' battlefleet.
@peterdavis7579
@peterdavis7579 12 күн бұрын
Many people now believe the Allies (Britain and France) won the Battle of the Somme. Have a look at this recent Imperial War Museum video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/l3PEYpWud7upaaM
@Gerhardium
@Gerhardium 10 күн бұрын
What was the objective of the German Fleet when they sortied? What was the objective of the Grand Fleet? The Germans didn't go to sea considering that "victory" would be a sinking a few ships before heading back home. Battles are not math equations the success of which is determined by the number of losses. The High Seas Fleet was not ready for another "victory" like that for weeks whilst the Grand Fleet was ready for another battle the next day. The aims of the Germans were not met whilst the aims of the British were met. Soviet losses During Operation Citadel and the battles around Kursk outweighed those of the Germans, did teh Germans win that battle by "counts of men and (tanks) lost?"
@alganhar1
@alganhar1 15 күн бұрын
Never really agreed with the Easterners, those among the British who wanted to fight in the 'classic' British way. Fact is the Western Front was the primary and main land front of the war. Had the British NOT sent so many men to fight in France and Belgium it is debatable whether France could have held on. Had France been knocked out of WWI then it was lost.... I think the Easterners, both then and now fail to realise that fact.
@mbell420
@mbell420 8 күн бұрын
I don't agree with the Easterners, but I also don't think Britain should have sent a huge army to France. Germany might have overrun the continent. That might have prolonged the war. However, like Napoleon, the naval blockage would have still won the war by economic pressure.
@flashgordon6670
@flashgordon6670 15 күн бұрын
Jellico could’ve been right and the Germans may have counter struck, the British Grand fleet with torpedo volleys and followed that up with a mass attack. At the very least that would’ve caused massive confusion and irreparable damage, to the their Grand fleet. Jellico’s first priority, was protecting the Grand fleet, above the destruction of Germany’s High fleet. He must’ve calculated the damages that were inflicted upon both fleets and knew that the British shipyards, could resolve Britain’s fleet damages, better and easier than Germany’s shipyards could theirs. He knew that the odds already swung in Britain’s favour, far more in another future battle. Than the odds to risk ratio, in chasing down Germany’s fleet after Jutland. He calculated all the risks and made the right decision. Perhaps this is where the saying was coined? “Better safe than sorry.” Or, “He who fights and runs away, lives to fight another day.” Thanks for a fantastic presentation. I really sensed the confusion and adrenaline that must’ve been surging and swaying at Jutland, and I learned a great deal from this. Please do a program, about the roles and operations, of the other major powers, in and around WW1 if possible. I was particularly curious about what the French, Russian and Turkish navies were up to, while Jutland was happening. Lastly, though Britain went against, their classic warfare strategy, in sending a massive land army, to fight the static war in France. Had we not done so, France would’ve been overrun by Germany, with disastrous consequences, for the outcome of the war. Germany could’ve kept its military and industry going indefinitely and not been forced to surrender. They would’ve likely been able to pose far greater threats to the Riyal Navy, successfully blockaded Britain, stopped US military assistance, helped the Turkish Empire, to defend the Middle East and forced Italy to truce. And once Britain fell, the rest of the world was next in line. I don’t agree with, how WW1 was fought, in the fields of France. But it was a crucial theatre in WW1, bc Russia wasn’t able to withstand Germany after 1917. Had the British army, not already been in place to defend France. Nothing would’ve stopped the Germans getting to Paris and onwards to victory.
@davidduma7615
@davidduma7615 15 күн бұрын
No one in the audience got the Frau Blücher joke?
@Sonnylife2010
@Sonnylife2010 17 күн бұрын
Always keep in mind that the UK knew what the Germans wanted to do by cracking they security codes…Churchill wanted the USA to join this war….maybe it was a false flag attack to sell the US public a good reason for joining into the war?The USA was the biggest profiteer during and after the war even in WW1 and WW2! And also keep in mind that the elites in every war regarding the whole human history all around the world that they never ever care about the losses of their people…😢
@CaptainHarlock-kv4zt
@CaptainHarlock-kv4zt 19 күн бұрын
As a Greek from Thessaloniki i can confirm the really disgraceful French actions during the great 1917 Fire . On the contrary the Brits made serious, yet unsuccessful, efforts to put the fire out.
@mike-cherylsmithson9539
@mike-cherylsmithson9539 19 күн бұрын
I obviously need to learn more…Laplander speaks like a warrior (he is a former Marine) captivating and engaging. I felt like I was in the battle at times.
@VeteranHedonist
@VeteranHedonist 20 күн бұрын
America late for another world war and claiming they win them.
@Healthytruth
@Healthytruth 20 күн бұрын
🙏🏻🇦🇲❤️💙🧡🇦🇲🙏🏻
@nelsonchereta816
@nelsonchereta816 20 күн бұрын
The European powers had been carving up the Ottoman Empire for a couple hundred years. The Russians had taken land all around the Black Sea and made it abundantly clear they wanted Constantinople above all. The British took Egypt and Kuwait City. The French had their eyes on Syria. Italy, the weakest of the Great Powers, had just taken Libya. Whenever any of the Balkans tried to rebel they received weapons and support. When the Greeks had their revolt, the Royal Navy prevented the Turks from sending in troops. The Ottomans, rightly, saw the Great Powers as wanting to carve them up and assumed that even if they were neutral if the Entente won, they'd be next. They went to war because it was the best of a bunch of bad options.
@user-qm7nw7vd5s
@user-qm7nw7vd5s 21 күн бұрын
Excellent Presentation. Don’t know why there are so many snarky comments here. I guess some people do not want to give the Americans credit for anything. Clearly, without the extraordinary intervention, sacrifice of the Americans, it would be Germany’s Europe.
@docholiday7975
@docholiday7975 17 күн бұрын
Because the presentation is heavily flawed if not outright wrong at points. It consistently emphasises the issues the Entente faced without doing the same for the Central powers whilst the strengths of the Germans (but not the Austro-Hungarians or Ottomans who had to be heavily supported by them) but not that of the Entente; this misrepresents the real situation by painting it in the worst possible light. Wawro is outright wrong regarding the battle of Belleau Wood and his emphasis on it does not reflect well upon him nor his study. Operation Blucher was halted the day prior to the battle and German documents (which he should have read during this archival work) are consistent in that the drive towards Paris a diversionary attack intended to divert reserves south to make way for Operation Hagen. It is also worth noting that the division the Americans faced was a defensive one, neither trained nor equipped for offensive action unlike storm trooper divisions, further emphasising that the action in that area was not offensive in mind, again undermining the notion that this was an attack towards Paris and the French line. There's also flaw in the logic of the argument; if the Americans were as green and poorly trained as he says they were, then how bad a shape must the Germans have been to be defeated by such a force? And if that is so, then were the Entente is such a bad position to begin with? That his colleagues such as Scott Stephenson or Richard Faulkner when they talk of American involvement take a far more balanced and less chauvinistic view is perhaps telling of why he's provoked such a reaction.
@timfogelson7076
@timfogelson7076 21 күн бұрын
Great stuff, thank you so much.
@alexanderaghayan117
@alexanderaghayan117 23 күн бұрын
Read the UK Parliament's transcripts concerning the Ottomans after their defeat. Accurate description and not complimentary to say the least
@paulhaskell-cooper676
@paulhaskell-cooper676 23 күн бұрын
Very interesting-Thanks.
@user-qm7nw7vd5s
@user-qm7nw7vd5s 23 күн бұрын
Who would have thought, trench warfare of 1914 would make a comeback in 2024?