We need these films and books to remind the current and future generations what total commitment to a cause is…… I remember watching the World at War series in the early 70’s… most now have never heard of it… there was no warning label back then…
@gloriaanaruma12795 жыл бұрын
These films are current and educational. I love all the levels that teach us how to face challenges and correct our shortcomings. Really the movies are a hidden treasure. Thanks for the post
@lunallena5594 Жыл бұрын
We need this remade for today.
@aarond233 жыл бұрын
The idea of a man cooking his own breakfast was unthinkable :)
@ethanmaloney34382 жыл бұрын
Considering when my mom got a job and my dad tried to cook anything except on the grill we had a grease fire? If you are not used to cooking for yourself doing so outside of easy things like the microwave or boiling water can end badly the first few times
@secondchance66032 жыл бұрын
No... not really.
@oliviamartini97002 жыл бұрын
Poor Bill there couldn't even manage a piece of unburnt toast 😂
@dawnelder9046 Жыл бұрын
My father could cook. Made breakfast every Sunday. I still remember him slicing the bacon.
@kevinadams94682 жыл бұрын
June 2022. I think we need have a re-make of this film for today and our coming challenges. On the monthly meeting of our village in Nebraska is the topic of permitting the keeping of chickens in residential yards - because of the coming recession. All of us who have been preparing, gardening and canning are no longer the crazy ones.
@theclumsyprepper2 жыл бұрын
Did you get the permits?
@mrsilence6662 жыл бұрын
Nah, you're still the crazy ones.
@ethanmaloney34382 жыл бұрын
@@mrsilence666 as someone who lives in a old farm (out of service now but we still raise chickens for ourselves) it can really help the budget and your diet if you have fresh eggs and meat on demand.
@Victoria-gq8gt2 ай бұрын
Now the government is banning chickens kept in private homes and land throughout America in order to 'save water', and demanding every bird be registered to 'stop the spread of bird flu'.. it's horrific!! They send drones over land now to uncover people who don't register their chickens. You can't put down concrete for chickens because then you'll be classified as a farm..
@philipduffer26696 жыл бұрын
That menu in French at 13:11 sounds tasty today! Great video. Thank God for all we can eat today!
@paulaharrisbaca48514 жыл бұрын
You know what messed us up? Not just Big Tobacco, that the other comment referred to. It was the old "better living through chemistry". So they eat artificially prepared foods. Sad to say even the President eats fast food, but some people seem to do alright on anything.
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
They're "surviving", not "thriving" on just anything. You can live off of practically just potatoes if you had to. And cancer takes years to develop normally when eating processed foods or other bad habits. Eating only or mainly artificially prepared foods- fast food, TV dinners, canned food only, can be detrimental to you and your family's health, especially children. Check the back of the packaging. If it has more than six ingredients and stuff you can not even pronounce, it's laden with chemicals or additives. In meals designed to keep for emergencies or to keep fighting troops fed is one thing, when out in the field. Not to be eaten for the entirety of your life though.
@ShadowNymph20105 жыл бұрын
Look at all those men carrying lunchboxes! Not like most men I see today wasting hard earned money on takeout & cafe lunches, then complaining they have to work more years because they haven’t saved enough money.
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
And look at all those men with stay at home wives. Unless these are young men fresh out of school, the majority of them have wives. Makes life a lot easier if she is doing her part and him for her and the rest of the family. The other single men are usually wippersnappers, too young to care about the future. Although that one eating the carrot was portrayed as being smart. In saying that though, I still agree with you. I too eat out some times. I just started to really hunker down and prepare everything the night before, if I am not walk-through-the-door-drop-dead-tired that is. Some of us have to work two jobs. I've tried meal prepping, but that doesn't seem to work for me. I waste more food than eat it would seem. Just last night I thought about buying a golden oldie lunch box with thermos, something that would last. Or a kids lunch box with a wacky design on it. Don't judge me! =P
@ShadowNymph20102 жыл бұрын
@@tilasole3252 no judgement here when you work long hours. I think my comment was also relating to convenience food being addictive. The dual income family requirement is so destructive to society IMO. I am blessed to be a SAHM under 40 still. We aren’t rich and don’t have a big home but we get by, with the understanding my role brings to easing the stress for the rest of the family. Because I support my husband and child through home, nutritional, budget, errands and effectively looking after their social and sporting schedules etc he has been able to put in extra hours at work and get more raises to cover the cost of living. It is through working as a team and having someone to focus on nurturing that this can be achieved more easily. If we don’t have health (physical and mental) we don’t have much to look forward to. I agree thermos meals are superior to make ahead options in some cases. When my husband was in his old office he was one of the only ones to take a packed lunch and his co-workers would get jealous of his homemade lunches compared to the same old cafe takeouts they had. Having said that, some of it is very easy to prepare ahead. Snack tubs of yoghurt with muesli, containers with fruit like grapes, cut melon or berries, nuts, boiled eggs etc. These are very quick to grab. Even a microwave egg poacher with a couple slices of bread and some leftover dinner meat, or a salad roll can be filling if you have access to a canteen room.
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
@@ShadowNymph2010 Don't do that to me... Stay At Home Mom or Single Asian Hetero Male? I had to look up the former. =P You are right. Convenience food is addicting. kzbin.info/www/bejne/naDCgoKwmJxsi8U Teach every child about food - Jamie Oliver (Ted Talks) kzbin.info/www/bejne/pKncqZaKj8iWqac Is a Calorie a Calorie? Processed foods, an experiment gone wrong kzbin.info/www/bejne/mnPRn5yrlptgpa8 Sugar: the Bitter Truth When I eat fast food my body demands a soda to go with it. I could try for a healthier option like a flavoured water, but I am not satisfied with that and it still has sugar or an artificial sweetener anyway. Getting just a water from them feels silly, since I am still "paying" for a soda. I can purposely not get one, trying to be health conscious. Drive back to my work's parking lot and start to eat the food I just bought and instantly crave a sugary drink the moment the food has entered my mouth. And I will either have to fight that strong urge and be frustrated the rest of the day that I am not getting what I want. Or in fact bend to it's ugly indomitable will and buy a canned soda from a "convenient" vending machine and then be disgusted for the rest of the day for feeling so weak and spending money on sugary poison... But I sometimes just need a sip or two. Then throw the rest away, along with the other 75¢ worth left over. So I try to stay away from fast food now and sodas in general. I drink hot/warm jasmine green tea now. It has a slight natural sweetness to it on it's own. No added sugars of any kind. My cravings have lessened. Although smelling someone else's food also triggers my want of a soda or prepared food. So it is still currently a battle. I suppose it is like an ex-smoker or alcoholic or someone trying to quit, but smelling or seeing everyone else do it. The cravings last. And if you get off the boat and go back to it, very likely you will stay on it again. "If we don't have health (physical and mental) we don't have much to look forward to". That's cuts deep..., straight to the soul actually. But what is there to look forward to being all alone? So what you have or I suppose your husband has, assuming I have the acronym right, is something I have wanted since I was a young child. I am past 40 now. Nothing seems to "stick". I've been independent since out of high school, having instantly joined the military. I'm out now, but lost both parents rather young, so no guidance. I know I've made mistakes, but damn it's hard to live alone. Not money wise, in my case at least. I make do. Just heart wise it's tremendously hard and quite painful, literally... Ha! Muesli... I just called it lazy oat meal... I make that myself with natural fruit. First time I ever heard that term before. And it is easy to make. Although depending how tired or depressed I am, something so simple to make can turn into a great feat needing super human strength. Some times I will just spend the time cooking that and attending to it by stirring, as I cook my super. Then in the morning wake up, heat on the stove lowish-medium and then get ready for work in-between stirrings and eat before I leave. Just started to eat carrots at work now including the green tops. Home-made roasted chickpeas. Fruit etc. Along with the hot tea. Sometimes I bring a meal and sometimes I do not. I try to sleep at work, as I do not sleep much at home, no matter how tired I may be. But I can not always sleep at work either, so I will go to a place and try to order something healthier than a greasy hamburger. I think I will just start bringing something easy like baked potatoes. No fuss, no muss. Microwave it or eat it cold. No extra sides. Maybe, but not usually, a pinch of salt. Actually just started to bring a hard boiled egg to work as well, but try to limit it to every other day. I buy the more expensive ones where the chickens are "supposed" to be treated better... They are mire expensive compared to the general kind. Like six times as expensive. But I get peace of mind of the animal's welfare, although not my wallet and it is healthier due to it's feed and conditions... I'd pay more for prepared eggs at a diner anyway (eerie the video touched on eating at a diner...) and they probably use the cheapest eggs anyway so... Ehhh... I wanted to start preparing toast as well for the last week or two, but I want the rye bread that IHOP no longer carries and I know it is not going to be cheap. Dollar Tree, now the Dollar Twenty-Five Tree still carries a decent selection of bread for $1.25... Whole wheat, among others. At the super market it'd be easily $2.50 or more. I was making my own bread at home. Even bought a slew of flour that will need to be used up eventually. But after watching other episodes from "this" playlist, kzbin.info/aero/PLUtmYhM_ZYPFRilIN01BGDDiXqLCG9M4Q UK War Rationing (it is where I found this particular video from. If you liked this video you will most probably enjoy the others as well.) among other videos I try to eat something more than just filling up on bread. And I love bread... Mmm... I'd prefer a freshly baked bread to a donut or a dozen actually. Oh and I do not do Eggies or As Seen On TV gadgets any more... They have never been 100% truthful. But now they seem to straight out lie to you. But yes not hard to prepare the night before. If you have the strength and will power and common sense to do it. Or have a wonderful Stay At Home Mom or Single Asian Hetero Male to do it for you. =P
@ShadowNymph20102 жыл бұрын
@@tilasole3252 it sounds like you have a strong spirit, have built character and are on the right track with dietary choices. There is no perfect diet, but trying the best we can helps. The convenience found factor doesn’t help people’s concentration & makes it easier to be apathetic toward life and sink into further depression. I’ve been there before with the guilt & self loathing cycles, once detoxed it is freeing but takes ongoing willpower to resist some old favourites. I use the term muesli which is common here. I am Australian though 🙂 Love the term “lazy oatmeal” haha. Yes, I can imagine it must be difficult to be alone but you have the benefit of working out what you want without compromise too. Praying for you that you find what it is you’re looking for 🙏🏼
@theclumsyprepper2 жыл бұрын
My flatmate makes his lunch every day. I bring my own lunch to work most days. I get free tea and coffee at work so they cuts down on cost while I still get to enjoy a latte.
@roscoefoofoo7 жыл бұрын
Thank God for these hard-working Canucks (my late father-in-law among them), helping their armed forces and the Brits hold off and then defeat the Germans. For that matter, thank God for Canada to this day, an example of decency and balance to the world.
@hankaustin70915 жыл бұрын
@Mark Miller Exactly right Mark!!
@rapman53633 жыл бұрын
Canada is a joke
@schlafrigerschmidt56593 жыл бұрын
@Mark Miller Don't forget the soviets, the most casualties in the wehrmacht suffered was on the eastern front, and the reds suffers 20million military casualties aswell
@secondchance66032 жыл бұрын
Those same people are rolling in their graves when you look at how Trudeau and western 'leaders' have destroyed the west.
@Caroline.1232 жыл бұрын
Haha
@americanpatriot36383 жыл бұрын
"You eat, when we say you eat!"
@TheDieselbutterfly3 жыл бұрын
You don't unda stand....theres been a mistake...I ain't supposed to be heeer
@americanpatriot36383 жыл бұрын
@@TheDieselbutterfly that was actually a different scene but im glad somebody got the reference 🤣
@ingridgallagher10293 жыл бұрын
"Put you trust in God. Your ass belongs to me".
@kristyw895 жыл бұрын
Why I never heard of such a thing as eating a CARROT! What a dork!
@rafaelsale63642 жыл бұрын
Working 12-hour shifts 7 days a week. To think back then it was normal, that would be illegal now because of federal labor laws.
@iseegoodandbad67585 жыл бұрын
When canada looked more British than American. Those were the days! Australia too! I heard some provinces then even drove left!!!!
@iseegoodandbad67585 жыл бұрын
No wonder Canadians, New Zealanders, Pakistanis (yes them believe it or not) and Australians want the British empire back!
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
@@iseegoodandbad6758 British propaganda machine at work...
@nickmad8875 жыл бұрын
thanks
@pookoos3 жыл бұрын
Am I having a stroke, or does the music in the last quarter of the film sound like Waltzing Matilda? Like at 11:40 and 13:11? I keep looking for Australians to appear.
@rosrychaplet7 жыл бұрын
any description would be great. ty.
@sean.furlong19895 жыл бұрын
11:10 That poor lad would be fired and arrested for a comment like that today.
@beverlycrusher97137 жыл бұрын
this is information they ALL knew. the problem was finding the food because of rationing.
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
Plenty of food to be had. Hence why certain things could be substituted for others. There were guidelines set up just for that. I also believe expectant mothers and children got the eggs and milk first for instance.
@secondchance66032 жыл бұрын
@@tilasole3252 Depends on where you lived, if it was in the UK during the second world war then you are completely wrong... unless you were part of the wealthy elite.
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
@@secondchance6603 that is not what the information says. Websites, old ads (could be propaganda), reports, testimonials, etc. Or are you speaking of mostly the milk (cheese) and eggs not being rationed first to expectant mothers and little children more than there just being food for most in the UK?
@secondchance66032 жыл бұрын
@@tilasole3252"WHEN DO WE EAT WARTIME NUTRITION & WORKING CONDITIONS FILM 1944 Note the date, 1944 big giveaway. Also note that this video is about Canada NOT the UK. Rationing ended in 1949 in the UK so I don't know where you got the idea there was "plenty to be had."
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
@@secondchance6603 Dozens of videos, some short, some long, most regarding the UK during WW2. It is where I found this video we are discussing now. Yes I am aware where this video is from. As well there is a video about the United States in the link as well. kzbin.info/aero/PLUtmYhM_ZYPFRilIN01BGDDiXqLCG9M4Q The 1940's House kzbin.info/aero/PL72jhKwankOh4hCcJEmGACv3y31CMBZBT Wartime Farm kzbin.info/aero/PL59GlH-H0rGGl7RUe5T7XzT4_ToqqNL5R Plus other random KZbinrs and clips plus websites. So the UK did have plenty of food. The really tasty things were rationed, other things like onions were hard to come by and bread was purposely made to be partly stale when you bought it. Also rationing lasted well after the war ended. I admit part of the "expectant mothers and children" getting dairy products first was part of the UK rationing system that I mentioned. But you brought up the UK in general not having enough food, unless wealthy, which is simply not true by any source I am familiar with. Mind you, you still had to be able to afford the food, the rationing books was just to ensure there was enough to go around and you did not get more than you actually needed to survive and prices were not purposely raised beyond normal means. The people of UK were healthier during the rationing than before and dare I say even afterwards.
@bitsnpieces114 жыл бұрын
I do believe I hear "Waltzing Matilda" at 11:50.
@veganleigh48172 жыл бұрын
And those were Canadian workers, not Australian!
@captbumbler53564 жыл бұрын
Great video but can you do one showing what was happening in the UK during the same time period. with all the rationing. I remember he day sweets came off the ration well after the war
@gerigowers83184 жыл бұрын
Just watched a series on "wartime kitchen and garden" in the UK during the war. Showed how to make mayo out of a potato when you didn't have eggs. Great series - 8 parts. They also had another British series where a family from now volunteered to move into a house recreated to be a 1940s house during the war. They got to build an Andersen bunker in their yard, make blackouts for the windows, etc. Another great series.
@theclumsyprepper2 жыл бұрын
Also try The Wartime Farm.
@relexelumna53602 жыл бұрын
Now i can understand what i seen in Charlie Chaplin films.
@belbe4176 жыл бұрын
Interesting
@saulypoly5 жыл бұрын
Did Canada ever start rationing ?
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
Yes. But I am not familiar with it.
@inglebrete3 жыл бұрын
At 4:42 what kind of juice does she refer to? I can't hear what word she says, "imama juice?" That's what it sounds like to me. Driving me crazy that I don't know she's saying! Ha
@tamaraanthony76243 жыл бұрын
Tomato to mato tamata take your pick😃😃
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
I was curious about that too.
@judithlewis9634 Жыл бұрын
Tomato. Ottawa Valley accent. Tahmahta.
@paulaharrisbaca48514 жыл бұрын
No fast food, you'll notice.
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
Fast food back in those days WAS the diner and cafeterias. McDonalds had not been invented yet. British had fish and chip shops, that could be considered fast food as well, but ehhh...
@Victoria-gq8gt2 ай бұрын
Bring back lunchpails. Ban plastic food wraps!!
@davesteadman12262 жыл бұрын
Where are all the obese people? Oh, never mind, MacDonald's hadn't been invented yet!!
@Coconut-02 жыл бұрын
😂
@nihilioellipsis9 ай бұрын
Sometimes I try to imagine in United States of America where people are happy and even eager to cooperate. But it's just not possible anymore. Our population is segregated in so many ways. social status caste income in quality inflation leaving paycheck to paycheck few economies of scale unemployment rents mortgages tuition. race and gender.
@Miss_Pixxie3 жыл бұрын
The numbers running along the bottom of the screen spoil this I'm afraid, too distracting.
@barbarabrantley47796 жыл бұрын
How much did they get paid? What was the hourly wage? I heard that the men were paid more per hour than the women for the exact same job.
@julia95576 жыл бұрын
Barbara Brantley almost all women stayed home and raised kids, while the man had to do back-breaking labor 12 hours a day and workplace deaths were common. Not to mention men drafted to be sent to die in wars. Life sure was much easier for women than men back in those days!
@julia95576 жыл бұрын
Barbara Brantley Most women stayed home and raised kids, while the men had to do back-breaking labor 12 hours a day in poor conditions and workplace deaths were common. Not to mention men drafted to be sent to die in wars! Life sure was much easier for women than men back in those days!
@barbarabrantley47796 жыл бұрын
Julia D what did your post mean? Did I say women had it worse than men? No. I asked about equality. Reread my post. You’re mixed up. Women may have had somethings easier but not much. The women worked hard to raise large families. There were few modern conveniences then. Life was hard for men and women.
@imreallydead.236 жыл бұрын
Barbara Brantley Don’t start on about equality reread what he said and then get down off your soap box, when a person is doing the same job but at a slower less efficient rate they deserve less money end of !!!
@denvercatwoman65616 жыл бұрын
My mother was a social worker beginning in the late 50s and the few male social workers were paid substantially more than the women. My mother explained that they thought the men were supporting a family while the women were what? Just working for the fun of it? My mother was the main one supporting our family.
@JB-rt4mx Жыл бұрын
Saffetey fi de bebes..none la buttle..spankin in de hidey hooles
@tilasole3252 Жыл бұрын
11:02 next video- Sexual Harassment 😅
@tilasole32522 жыл бұрын
Trip the 3rd eats raw carrots
@bunnyfoofoo96954 жыл бұрын
The narrator is so condescending.
@iseegoodandbad67585 жыл бұрын
At least food then was organic natural and made you tall, and feminine!!!!!!!
@cementer76655 жыл бұрын
Canadian film + "Waltzing Matilda" = cultural appropriation, eh?