Keep The Video Suggestions Coming! Thank You For Watching!
@SebastianRamirez-lx4hz10 ай бұрын
You Should do a Video about the Battle Of Athens not the ww2 one how a corrupt government in a small American town got overthrown
@FoundationPropagandist10 ай бұрын
Battle of Midway
@d.lam.817810 ай бұрын
Do a video on Gaston Glock!
@hocjock0510 ай бұрын
I’d love to see a video about William Cullerton! The means of his rescue is right up your alley. And he was an overall badass!
@oxide967910 ай бұрын
You should throw back to your short format style for a single video and do one about the CBU-97 Sensor Fuzed Weapon, a US made, anti-tank, smart cluster bomb
@HistoryNerd80810 ай бұрын
I think JFK said it the best: "freedom has many difficulties and democracy is not perfect but we have never had to put up a wall to keep our people in, to prevent them from leaving us."
@the_fat_electrician10 ай бұрын
FACTS
@Atarilas10 ай бұрын
Damn I never knew he said that before he ain’t wrong tho
@marvinmurphy552310 ай бұрын
Except we are a constitutional republic not a democracy.
@ButtTouch10 ай бұрын
"One republic under god" if im remembering correctly. @@marvinmurphy5523
@HistoryNerd80810 ай бұрын
@@marvinmurphy5523 A republic is a form of democracy, we're both. It would be like arguing that our unhealthcare factory is an F-15 not a fighter plane.
@kellmyers870810 ай бұрын
I met a lady from East Berlin who was eleven when the wall came down and her dad was a guard in one of the towers along the wall. Doing that destroyed him mentally. She told me that if he did not shoot people trying to escape, the secret police would have disappeared him and his family. That was standard operating procedure for disobedient guards, and her father said a couple of people he worked with at the time disappeared. Here one day, gone the next. I will never understand how people can’t look at the Soviet flag and feel the same disdain and disgust as when looking at the Nazi Germany flag.
@JohnDoe-wt9ek10 ай бұрын
Its kind of like how, now, there are Gen Z kids who think Osama Bin Laden is a hero. Stupidity is a genetic flaw, not a lacking availability of resources. You genuinely cannot fix stupidity.
@jasonsimons441110 ай бұрын
Super random bit of information... Did you know Hitler never referred to their symbol as a swastika? The exact translation was "hooked cross" but the people that translated his book didn't want his symbol associated with Christianity so they called it a swastika instead.. I personally choose to still call it a hooked cross since there are over a dozen variations from all over the world and all throughout history.. only the one called the hooked cross has such a horrific meaning.. it was the only one rotated on a 45 degree angle, and it rotated to the left, which in many cultures means moon or evil (fitting).. for vikings, the swastika (commonly called the broken sun due to its shape) symbolized thors hammer (another symbol stolen by ignorant hateful people). In Japan and China they used these symbols to mean many things including prosperity. The oldest example actually came from modern day Ukraine and is 15,000 years old. It's been a while since I've shared this information. But it's just my way of hopefully reminding myself and others that no matter how much negative we see in the world, if you look, you can find way more positive..
@jasonsimons441110 ай бұрын
Forgot to mention the word swastika comes from a Sanskrit word meaning luck, well being, and fortune..
@marquisdelafayette192910 ай бұрын
If not for the Soviets, I doubt that the US would have been able to defeat the Nazis. They captured more Nazis in a single operation (Operation Bagration) than the US fought in the entirety of the European theater. Look at their losses vs the US, they took the entirety of the brunt of the German military. Then (and only then) did we think of invading. Don’t forget too that the US doesn’t have clean hands either. We captured Germans and threw them in field surrounded with a barbed wire fence with armed guards… no shelter (just holes in the dirt), barely any water, and barely any food. Definitely no toilets. A lot died from disease or malnutrition. FDR struck a deal at Yalta with Stalin and FDR actually went out of his way to cultivate a good relationship with the Allies and Stalin… he was pissed they took their grand ol time opening another European front, saying we were using them as “cannon fodder” which is exactly what we were doing. But then FDR dies and we get the idiot Truman who openly said to the press basically “let’s let them kill each other and then see who’s winning then support the other “. So from the get go he destroyed any good relationship with the Soviets cementing us as an enemy. All because he didn’t want to play politics. Didn’t have to be that way. But naively seeing things as black or white is what caused the entire sequence of events leading to the Cold War. But wait… what happened to all those Nazis? America let almost all go with a slap on the wrist then gave them new lives in America. Like nothing happened. So yeah the Soviets suck but so did everyone else.
@FelloDello10 ай бұрын
@@jasonsimons4411Say you spend too much time on Reddit, without saying you spend too much time on Reddit.
@BraydenCutler10 ай бұрын
I got in an arguement with an actual communist the other day. I asked them why the Berlin Wall was built and they really said "To keep the capitalists out of our society..." I never really realized how strong propaganda could be until then. It's wild.
@troybaxter10 ай бұрын
Lol, I would have clapped back with, "then why were people trying to get over the wall into West Berlin?"
@Stevarooni10 ай бұрын
Record-keepers that they were, I'm sure East Germany has a record of how many capitalists they shot breaking in versus those disloyal comrades breaking out? 🤡
@BraydenCutler10 ай бұрын
@@troybaxter I did in fact ask him that. He proceeded to back out of the conversation
@SuperSparrow817310 ай бұрын
@@BraydenCutler ain’t that funny
@diabolicalfox10 ай бұрын
Actual history is no match for the university system :|
@dustybrand6 ай бұрын
One of the most incredible men I've ever known made it over the wall in 1963 as an 18-year-old. His mother had always told him that if he got the chance to take it and not look back. He was a delivery boy for a hardware store and had two pails of paint he was delivering when he saw a ladder set up at a low point of the wall with another ladder set up of the Western side with not a soul observing anywhere. He climbed to the top, set the paint down and scaled down. Two weeks later he was working as a landscaper in New York, joined the U.S. Army and went on to be brass in Army CID. He was one of the most humble and polite men I've ever known and a true gentleman. One of his sons became a Marine and the other became a Cav Scout. I am lucky to have known him.
@jackthorton106 ай бұрын
Two ladders, … a climb from hell into heaven above, and back down to earth …. Amazing
@yzwme5864 ай бұрын
Damn what a lad
@williamhensley86983 ай бұрын
I served with an East German in the Army during the eighties. He was a political prisoner who was rescued by Amnesty International, paying his ransom. He was a tough SOB who became a Ranger.
@SynchronizorVideos3 ай бұрын
I guess high-viz vests didn’t exist back in the 1960s, but carrying paint cans was probably still a pretty good camouflage. Hope he was able to reconnect with his mom after escaping.
@jimreilly9173 ай бұрын
That man is a BOSS. 18. I can’t even imagine. And my grandparents were all from Ireland a century ago…they left and never saw their parents again. That’s a sacrifice.
@Echowhiskeyone10 ай бұрын
1989, I was taking German as a language in college at this time. My professor was a German with family on both sides. While learning German, we talked of Germany and the Wall. One morning we walked into class, into a celebration waiting on us. Class that day was a party that we spoke as much German as we could, watched the news and celebrated the tearing down of the Wall. A big impact on my life, and I have never been to Germany.
@jimreilly9179 ай бұрын
I was in college then. A friend was a foreign exchange student from Norway. We were watching the news when Germany came on, the people destroying the Wall. I turned to ask my friend his opinion…and was silenced at the tears streaming down his face. ALL of Europe rejoiced in the destruction of the Wall.🇺🇸🇩🇪
@stormangelus66388 ай бұрын
That's epic. I remember seeing the news as the wall fell & thinking, may this break the spine of Communism
@wordforger7 ай бұрын
I'm an American born in a country that ceased to be not too long after I was born. My birth certificate says, "West Germany." The wall fell in the year after that.
@jimreilly9177 ай бұрын
I was in college. We were in dorm commons watching TV. This was in the Ozarks. I had a friend who was from Norway or Sweden…can’t remember. The news came on showing Berlin residents gleefully destroying the Wall. I asked Juri how it felt watching this. Silence. I turned around, and my friend just sat , smiling, with tears rolling down his face. A hated symbol of a detested regime. GONE!
@kristofevarsson69036 ай бұрын
@@wordforger Foreign kid and his family moved to my town and kid started going to my school district, but was ahead of me by a few years. I couldn't believe it when many, many years later he told me his birth certificate says "Yugoslavia" on it. My dad also worked for an old man's tile company, dad finds out the old man was born as a legal citizen of a little country called "Czechoslovakia". I've come to discover that history is never, ever old.
@vibechecker316810 ай бұрын
"Why do Stasi officers make such good taxi drivers? - You get in the car and they already know your name and where you live."-common east german joke at the time.
@the_fat_electrician10 ай бұрын
LOL
@pauld696710 ай бұрын
I have not heard that one before. It is similar to one I learned in the military during the Cold War about KGB officers conducting an investigation.
@twinzzlers10 ай бұрын
Russian citizens during the Cold War had amazing senses of humor lol
@jaegercat670210 ай бұрын
@@twinzzlerswhen you’re in a situation like that, sometimes humor is all you have to get through it.
@rohesilmnelohe10 ай бұрын
@@twinzzlers "Russian citizens..." they had no sense of humor because they were in charge. Soviet citizens were the ones who developed that sense of humor to deal with the stalinist tyranny. Biggest tragedy of 20th century was that the russian federation survived the fall of USSR.
@spoopyd.891010 ай бұрын
Anti-communist propaganda? That's a weird way to spell The Truth.
@isaiahcampbell48810 ай бұрын
That's just the truth with more steps.
@johngregory480110 ай бұрын
The same way that commercials caused generations of children to think "relief" was spelled "rolaids". Repeat the lie often enough, it becomes accepted as the truth... As Hitler taught.
@johngregory480110 ай бұрын
@@Pope-enhiemer You know nothing... And assume much.
@TheRyno52510 ай бұрын
@@Pope-enhiemer Ill send you pics of my boat for you to look at while you stand in the bread line.
@Sun-ut9gr10 ай бұрын
@@Pope-enhiemer you paid 0 because your broke ass didn't even clear the standard deductible
@jmass42075 ай бұрын
Remember when they say “seize the means of production” you are included in that umbrella.
@haveaknifeday2 сағат бұрын
Sounds like a quote from Kamala.
@LordBloodraven10 ай бұрын
"Democracy is not perfect, but we have never had to put a wall up to keep our people in." JFK Bridge of Spies did take some liberties in characterizing the CIA handler, but very accurately displayed the lawless environment of East Berlin when the Wall started going up.
@tgs974010 ай бұрын
And that same government killed off jfk.
@johnhines22910 ай бұрын
Watching you dunk on communism, whether it be here or on unsubscribe, has become one of my favorite pastimes.
@mikekent405210 ай бұрын
Facts!
@kasper_42910 ай бұрын
Nick's drunken rants on Unsub are some of the best content on that podcast, lmao. That is the only podcast that I've actually binged every video (well, every video after Baddie left) and loved every minute of it. I love it because all of my favorite GunTubers either host it or have been guests on it.
@TgTheRedHood2 ай бұрын
Couldn’t agree more. I do this in my Bible study group at the end of the study. Very specific skill set, teach the Bible and keep relevant the honor and heroism of our service men along with keeping the horrors of communism and socialism ever present. Thanks for all you do!
@johnhowe617810 ай бұрын
As a veteran who served in Germany in the 80s, I can 100% support EVERYTHING you said in the last two videos. I have pictures of east german guards taking pictures of drunk tourists visiting the fence between east and west. On the west side you could walk right up to the fence in places, and tour guides would take you to those places. On the east side you couldn't get within 200 yards or you'd be shot.
@SGobuck10 ай бұрын
Where was this that you could walk right up to the fence 5m from the actual border??
@bruss52910 ай бұрын
@@SGobuck That depends entirely by what you mean by fence. The fence and the border are 2 different things and there are different fences. One can get close to the border but not be near the fence. He may mean the fences the US put up to keep tourists from creating incidents. Look for the KP stones and the barber poles, that's the border.
@KipdoesStuff10 ай бұрын
@@SGobuck stop being a pedantic prick.
@edmondnadeau81805 ай бұрын
I have a friend that lives in Brownwood Tx. Auto tech. When the Berlin Wall came down. He was serving in the same US Army unit at Checkpoint Charlie, as his father had served, when the Wall went up. The father saw the Berlin Wall go up, the son saw it come down. Got to admit that's pretty cool!
@hmnorton10 ай бұрын
My 8th grade German teacher lived in East Berlin and was a teacher there. She was such a "menace to society" that they finally let her go over to West Berlin. She talked about that crossing moment to us and about how scared she was for herself and her 2 kids because "once she signed the papers disavowing the USSR citizenship, she was no longer protected and the guards could do anything they wanted to her and her 2 kids".
@TheMNrailfan22710 ай бұрын
That’s evil, straight up villain behavior
@dalemcdenver781610 ай бұрын
@@TheMNrailfan227 Welcome to Communism, where your rights don't matter and the cake is a lie. As well as southern fruits, not gonna get these....
@_Its_Ya_Boy10 ай бұрын
@@TheMNrailfan227 What else do you expect from Bolsheviks?
@TheMNrailfan22710 ай бұрын
@@_Its_Ya_Boy true
@marekserocki97410 ай бұрын
Guards could do anything from the moment she was born, it doesn't matter if she was a citizen of DDR (I don't think she was a USSR citizen)
@jones27710 ай бұрын
The best thing about the berlin wall is that shortly before the wall was built, the east german leader Walter Ulbricht said: "Nobody has the intention of building a wall"
@harbl9910 ай бұрын
A communist...lied. Who could have foreseen such a thing?
@Robert-zz7qj2 ай бұрын
He continued: "our construction workers are needed to build housing". It is considered to be the second greatest lie in history.
@dabbasw31Ай бұрын
That was a meme before memes were a thing.
@feartheghus17 күн бұрын
A communist lied? God, the grass must be green in Berlin too!
@misery97810 ай бұрын
The fact that so many people my age think communism is the best route for us to take is absolutely horrifying to me
@troybaxter10 ай бұрын
I get the complaints people have about capitalism and our current economic inequalities and political corruption. But the solution is to reform capitalism away from corporatism, not convert to communism!
@misery97810 ай бұрын
@@troybaxter I couldn't agree more
@Mizuna75210 ай бұрын
It's because people our age don't actually understand what communism actually means. Keep in mind we are the participation award generation, "everyone wins and no one is really a loser" is what many were raised on and communism to the uneducated can sound a lot like equal outcomes and everyone winning.
@Jnor11610 ай бұрын
Communism as an economic idea isn't the issue. Communism as it's been presented to the worls has always been either a 1 party autocracy, or a dictatorship. You have to separate the political structure we have all seen from the economic idea. Actual Communism exists in the United States. We call them co-op corporations where the workers actually own the business. That way everyone gets profit sharing and a voice in how the business is run.
@troybaxter10 ай бұрын
@@Mizuna752 but it is worth point out who were the ones to instill such a mindset in our generation. Remember, just like the participation trophies, they had to come from someone older than us. Someone that has money and power.
@garyleibitzke41667 ай бұрын
I'm old enough to have watched the wall go up and I doubted I'd ever see it fall. Then on Nov. 9th, 1989 I watched it fall, live on TV. I sat on my couch with tears of joy streaming down my cheeks.
@michaelblaes9847Ай бұрын
I watched MTV to watch the wall fall. I was a 7th grade student and it was crazy.
@scottcoley190617 күн бұрын
I remember watching this and with former military in my family, I knew what it meant for all those people. MTV did a live broadcast for 2 days straight I think interviewing people who were coming over the wall. It was awesome to see freedom prevail over oppression. 🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
@itwaswalpole10 ай бұрын
A serious contender for a new video should be Josef Menčik, the last knight. He was a Czech guy living in the 20th century who liked to ride a horse wearing full medieval plate armour and lived in a castle with no electricity. He collected medieval artifacts and tried to get young people interested in history by inviting schools to his castle. In 1938 the Nazis crossed the border into Czechoslovakia and Menčik prepared for war. Despite being 68 he got into his armour, onto his horse and charged at panzers crossing the border with his halberd. He wasn't shot at by the invading Nazis and was left be. He survived the war and died in 1945, a few days after his castle was nationalised by the Czechoslovak government.
@ximthedespot467310 ай бұрын
Here from Mark Felton's video as well?
@rjtrageser988410 ай бұрын
Imagine invading a foreign country, you see a castle, and this sixty something year old man comes charging at you on a horse and in full Knight's armour with a pike, screaming at the top of his lungs scariest shit ever.
@BQwain10 ай бұрын
@@rjtrageser9884 sounds like the next Hollywood movie plot actually.....
@MrGaryGG4810 ай бұрын
@@BQwain Yup, Mel Gibson or Stallone, which ever is available for a couple of weeks... "Mad Max on a Clydesdale." What a concept!! 👍😂🤣
@kyriss1210 ай бұрын
Sounds like a real life don quiote.
@chefrowlet10 ай бұрын
why i'm anti-communist: 1. they were literal inches away from ending my family line and 2. [gestures vaguely at a nearby history book]
@theenderdestruction236210 ай бұрын
Me: (points violently to a nearby history book for the idiots in the crowd)
@tommynobaka10 ай бұрын
same here, family are survivors of the khmer rouge
@brothersgt.grauwolff671610 ай бұрын
@@theenderdestruction2362 , unfortunately those individuals your showing the history book to are looking at you thinking your insane cause to them if it's not a meme then it's not history
@SulliverVittles10 ай бұрын
Why I'm communist: Capitalism has killed more people than any ideology in modern history.
@DarkMark-cf1ec10 ай бұрын
3 books communists revolve-r their life around (If it fails they're just going to play russian rullet lol): Economy and budgeting 101 (don't read it) History books (don't read it) "Jewish question" or other Marx'es books. The author just promised everything good once you give him power and Free labour (yes zaddy!)
@DaveDeVault10 ай бұрын
I knew someone who dated an escapee from the former Czechoslovakia back in the late 80s into the mid 90s. He waited two days at the border, watching the guards and how they operated, without food. He finally made a break for it and got shot at but made it. Fast forward to the fall of communism and he brought his mother over to the US to visit. He brought her to a normal, non super sized, grocery store. She started crying and could not believe 1) there was this much food available anywhere and 2) if you had the money anyone could buy it.
@annieseaside10 ай бұрын
In 1979 our Church in Worcester, MA sponsored a Russian couple to emigrate here. They were both Doctors and their teen son. I brought them to Iandolis a medium to small local grocery store. They were stunned and argued it must be for the Wealthy & Powerful people? Or maybe was just for show? No no I said, look we can put anything in the cart. The cereal aisle blew their minds but she started crying seeing the meat section where you just chose anything. She had never in her life “chosen” protein. If the Butcher had anything he handed you a portion but you had no say as to what cut or how much. Many times in her life she would wait in line at a shop having been told they had a shipment of (fill in the blank, some food item) and often the shop would run out before her turn came. The choices were mind blowing for them for months and they hadn’t seen anything yet as we later took them to other places like the Mall. I worked in a store called The Walrus that sold just jeans. Jeans were Very High Value, Scarce and prized in Moscow. To see store after store with endless racks was unbelievable.
@praetorian390210 ай бұрын
@@annieseaside Thanks for sharing this.
@Closurenomore5 ай бұрын
JFk put it best " Democracy isn't perfect but we never had to build a wall to keep people in."
@TimBarnett-pl9kd9 ай бұрын
Berlin wall showed me what "Freedom" is when our older German couple went to Berlin to acquire they're 2 son's an daughter, after wall came down. When they all got back to Oregon, we invited family to Thanksgiving dinner. Ours was outdoor family and had elk meat, salmon, Lin cod along with turkey dinner. Daughter sees all the food an never imagine so much, an such variety of food? After minutes they are all crying. My mom starts to cry, then my sister. I ask dad, is it all this food making them cry? Partly, but I think it's our Freedom that gives us a chance to have such a table for Thanksgiving!
@flotterotto44917 ай бұрын
The opening was a planned action to infiltrate the West and it was successful, because todays west is now down to the same level if dictatorship as the commis were in thise days...
@squalosus2235 ай бұрын
This makes me damn proud to be American. Thanks for sharing, dude.
@jimreilly9175 ай бұрын
No one appreciates living in liberty like someone deprived of liberty.
@RTRPatriot4 ай бұрын
I teared up reading this. Makes me thank God I grew up in the US. We’re not perfect, but there is a reason why that the people of Hong Kong waved our flag in protest to the ChiComs. They knew what was about to happen to them…
@jimreilly9174 ай бұрын
@@RTRPatriot and hoped we would do something. Unfortunately, Build Back Better is a worldwide disaster.
@dersylvio308810 ай бұрын
As someone who almost daily drives over the old east/west border for work, let me tell you that you can still see the difference between Bundesrepublik und DDR to this day. If you see the old inner german border stripe in person, you instantly realize how insanely rediculous the whole thing was. But if people are determined enough, they will find a hole in any obstacle ... to a point where you have entire museums showcasing all the ways to escape.
@pmclaughlin411110 ай бұрын
I studied in Berlin in the late 80s. Because it was cheaper, I would fly into East Berlin and transfer over to West Berlin...It was like one side was in Black and White and the other in Technicolor and the most surreal thing I have ever seen is looking out either side of the bus as you passed between the walls.
@theenderdestruction236210 ай бұрын
When tyrants pop up, it turns out mankind doesn't like em and if they can they will escape them and if that doesn't work, shit might get violent
@FilkMarionson10 ай бұрын
I visited West and East Berlin as a teenager. Even then, at such a young age, I could plainly see a night and day difference. It was sobering.
@MrVvulf10 ай бұрын
My father worked for military intelligence intercepting communications (mostly between the Stasi and the KGB) and translation at Field Station Berlin (aka Teufelsberg "Devil's Mountain") from 1963-1969. He has some harrowing stories about Checkpoint Charlie, and other stories he doesn't tell much. One of his functions was to monitor communications for any hints that the Stasi and KGB were anticipating an "exfiltration" of a VIP. My mother, sister and I all also lived in West Berlin, East Germany which looks weird to even write now. One of the few times I ever saw him cry was when the wall finally came back down.
@SleepingNeutron10 ай бұрын
Check the street lights and you can see where the old lines were. Also an Army Intel brat, lived there Feb 80 to Feb 83 and remember having t-shirt that said “I’m not a tourist, I live here.”
@guido83910 ай бұрын
For me this was one of your best videos you have made so far! Why? Because as a former East-GermanI can say you nailed it. Without doing a to deep dive into the historical facts and circumstances your summary is conclusive and correct. My wife’s uncle and aunt escaped East-Germany via the Baltic Sea, I myself explored every possibility to flee to Freedom since I was 14 years old. In 1989 I was active in the counterrevolution against the communist dictatorship in East-Germany. The press conference held by Günter Schabowski on the 8th November 1989 I followed live together with my father. After Schabowski uttered the famous words "to my knowledge, this applies immediately, immediately", my father and I drank a cognac to the end of the communist dictatorship in East Germany, which was only a democratic republic by name. By the way, thanks and appreciation to Ronald Reagan who stood in front of the "Brandenburger Tor" and said the most important words in direction of M. Gorbachev:"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!", these words gave a lot of hope …
@chrismaverick982810 ай бұрын
Too many now look at him as someone who was just an old coot who didn't know what he was doing half the time when in fact he was playing 4th dimensional chess against everyone else's checkers, building opportunities for a future few others could see. He had some of the brightest minds behind him and wasn't afraid of the world's bullies.
@Damons-Old-Soul10 ай бұрын
@@chrismaverick9828Which him?
@chrismaverick982810 ай бұрын
Ronald Reagan. @@Damons-Old-Soul
@DefiantAero10 ай бұрын
Fantastic story, and thank you for sharing it.
@zamboughnuts10 ай бұрын
These comments are bringing a tear to my eye.
@frankmartin84718 ай бұрын
You're one of the best history teachers I've ever listened to. Please keep doing what you do. And thanks.
@LeafyMouse447810 ай бұрын
My uncle in highschool was able to be the last class from his school to go through checkpoint Charlie the year before the wall came down. Hearing the story from him every time is amazing.
@Oblivisci........10 ай бұрын
Fun fact: My father was in the American army and stationed with 10th SFG in Germany. One day, while out and about he saw this (his words) bodacious German woman walk out of the same apartment building he lived in. She wanted nothing to do with him. Of course after some American smokth talking they finally went out on a date. She still hated him. She would see him around and come to find out they had a mutual friend and they both showed up at her house party. With a little gluwein and couple beers they found out they actually had nothing in common. They got along though and after a while she started to kinda like him in her own very German very cold kinda way. I was born a year later or so. A year later, when my pops was on r&r, they took a trip up to Berlin and the news of people storming the checkpoints spread like wildfire. My mom refused to let my dad talk her out of seeing this moment in her peoples history. They both witnessed the fall of the wall and my mother actually took up a pickaxe and smashed it a few times herself for funsies. We have two chunks of that wall framed in the living room at their home.
@robertparis568010 ай бұрын
that's a fantastic story of perseverance and drive. your father that is, not the wall falling lmao. a cold german woman into a wife and mother as an american solider in the cold war had to have been some work lmao
@MamaGTV10 ай бұрын
I was there in Berlin when the wall fell, and it was truly a pivotable moment in history. I was 10 years old at the time, and the energy in the air was infectious! There's an iconic photo of a hand reaching through the wall from the east shaking another Germans hand from the west. The West Germans hand was my brother, Boris'. I'm so grateful that I was alive during that time and have not for one moment of my life ever considered communism to be a solution or an answer to the problems of humanity. I remember all too well, but it was like visiting the east after the wall came down. It was literally like going back in time. The people had a few to know choices with what they could buy, have, learn, or share. It was like going back in time into a weird, sterile, sci-fi movie, and I will never forget it.
@MegadethTillDeth10 ай бұрын
Now Germany is awash with migrants from every other nation raping your women and resources. You guys can't catch a fuckin' break over there.
@tiergeist263910 ай бұрын
und bald ist der ganze westen komm.... Kannst dich dann wieder in die Zeit zurückversetzt fühlen😄😉😔
@leonardhpls610 ай бұрын
Wow the East Germans hand was my brother, Ludwig 😮
@valyshknee420310 ай бұрын
East germany, If anything it was better than Germany today, Stasi also doesn't make a difference, Infact the Stasi is better than what we have today which is digital espionage and arrests based on anti-woke opinions you posted online, It was infact more free since camera's didn't exist, It was also more cheap, The gas was cheap, The diesel was cheap, Electricity DIDN'T have a price since it was directly pulled off your wages, Everyone had a home as soon as they turned 18, Right upon joining west germany all of that went to sh, my father said all the issues were literally turned upsidedown as soon as east german combined with west germany, instead of people wanting to leave you instead had a overinflux of immigrants, instead of a waiting list for a car of a couple years (which isn't bad since public transport was everywhere and cheap as hell) you now have a waiting list for a terrible apartment of a couple years (which is worse because unlike public transport there is literally no other option apart from staying with your parents till your 24th) instead of low living costs the costs were increased by 10-15 times.
@HagbardCeline-kq3lo10 ай бұрын
@@valyshknee4203 It's amazing how you said all that shit, instead of just saying "I'm a mindless commie automaton that needs to be removed from the planet.".
@3rdFloorblog7 ай бұрын
Haven't even made it to the main video and the interaction with your dog just brought a huge smile...gotta love the doggies!
@harlech210 ай бұрын
I remember this like it was yesterday. And not 34 years ago. A couple of haunting stories that have filtered down from the fall of the Berlin wall. The first was about an elderly lady who owned a third floor apartment. Apparently whatever agency that was in charge of seeing she was cared for just abandoned the AO. Her body was found about 15 years in the same apartment. As it had been cold when wall fell, she had her heat cranked up and the high heat had mummified her. The other story wasn't quite as grim. Guy owns an apartment. For some reason the building management needed to access the apartment. So they summoned a locksmith, opened it up and it was an absolute time capsule. There was a newspaper neatly folded on the kitchen dinette dated November 9th and the TV was tuned to whatever channel the announcement was made on. There were multiple signs that he had at least one dog, but no dog corpses were found. Nor was there any leash found. Dudes heavy jacket was missing from the coat closet. So it appeared he heard the news on TV, packed up Mans Best Friend, and beat feet before the government changed its mind. Just left his whole life behind.
@Rotorhead165110 ай бұрын
I remember watching this on TV. David Hasselhoff (the actor) displayed his European popularity as a pop-singer. German citizens were attacking the wall with whatever tools they had available, at some points, after breaking out much of the concrete, they would use their own bodies as counterweights to pull the sections down.
@kendemajoros461710 ай бұрын
Having grown up on the wrong side of the iron curtain, I sooooooooo agree with your assessment of any form of communism. We all wanted to escape.
@DarkMark-cf1ec10 ай бұрын
Communists trying not to consider Cuban escapees and Berlin wall escapees "stepping stones" challange: (impossible) just like for the Austrian painter.. who took inspiration from Marx, like seriously.
@Eye_Of_Odin9784 ай бұрын
@@DarkMark-cf1ec Ironically, despite how much tankys and sk1n-h3ads hate each other, they're basically just two sides of the same coin.
@DarkMark-cf1ec3 ай бұрын
@@Eye_Of_Odin978 well yes, it all derives from Marxes "jewish question" book and his talk of equality.. which usually devolves down to "might makes right"
@FiveSlow2 ай бұрын
after watching this treasure trove of videos ive never seen, ive decided you are the greatest story teller in history
@bheckner10 ай бұрын
I was in HS when the wall fell. It didn't really sink in until that moment how precious freedom is to everyone. 🙏🇺🇸
@rcrawford4210 ай бұрын
I had the misfortune of having to attend some feelings training for work, and the instructor claimed the Berlin Wall was to keep the West out of the East. I tried to correct her, but she claimed that's what her source said. My response was "No one was shot going across the wall from west to east."
@Banthisyoutube-zs6sx10 ай бұрын
Don't bother argueing with an idiot.......they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.....mark twain.
@logicplague10 ай бұрын
Absolute insanity.
@duanebailey625310 ай бұрын
Just laugh and say ya people love starvation and spending 40 hours a week for bread that costs a dollar in the west.
@hockey6619110 ай бұрын
Did you tell her about when one of the Soviet leaders (can't remember which one) came to America he went and toured a groceries store and said "My country is doomed"?
@1992AC10 ай бұрын
@@hockey66191that was the last guy, Mikhail Gorbachev.
@anthonyvais210 ай бұрын
Having lived in Berlin soon after the fall of the wall, it was quite clear and obvious, the need to destroy basically all of the still bombed out buildings from the "die neue funf," and replace it with modernity. I thank you for this video, it's my favorite Christmas Present! FYI, in 1997 every other apartment building in Friedhrichshain, Berlin, Prenzlberg Berlin, and Angerbrucke Leipzig still had bomb damage from World War II, 42 years after the fact. The damage done to the communities during the communist era of the DDR ecologically as well as in the zeitgeist of the people is still not erased. One could argue, that 15 years or so of Nazism, was less damaging even with the War, as opposed to 40 years of communistic peace and it's devestation to land and mind, even the mindset in the old east is still idiotic and authoritarian. Russian culture clearly struggles to get rid of it as well. Communism may just be the most evil thing that has happened to the world and yet it's taught as a nice alternative in half of American Universities by those that never understood the terror.
@vidard986310 ай бұрын
No, it's pretty much a fact that 40 years of communism is worse than 15 years of socialism and war.... Which is pretty horrible itself.
@pmclaughlin411110 ай бұрын
I pent about a month studying in Berlin in the 80s. It was wild walking around East Berlin and realizing how many scars of ww2 were obvious...even more so when compared with the vibrancy of West Berlin. One could argue, that 15 years or so of Nazism, was less damaging even with the War, as opposed to 40 years of communistic peace but that would only take place at those American Universities that are teaching communism. The ones that aren't are teaching people not to argue but to accept doctrine without question. Aslo, I would argue that after reading de Toqueville (1835) and his opinion on America and (at that time, Imperial) Russia, on could better understand Russian cultures struggles with the Communist philosophy.
@revscottymaelstrom10 ай бұрын
Relative peace of Communism? Relative to what? Real peace?
@anthonyvais210 ай бұрын
@@revscottymaelstrom are you asking an actual question? Is it peaceful to wonder if the secret police are going to arrest you every night, if the government will come into your home and confiscate your food every night, or lock you in solitary confinement on trumped up charges in a room one foot wide and only four feet tall in the dark for 12 hours for not knowing something?
@MrGaryGG487 ай бұрын
I attended the American High School in Ludwigsburg, about 10 km from Stuttgart in the early 1960s, when my dad was stationed there in the US Army. We were in Berlin in December 1961 and among other things, visited Check Point Charlie. Standing upon the viewing platform, looking into East Berlin was just chilling. It looked like WWII had stopped yesterday. The rubble had been cleared from the sidewalks but not removed. When I turned to look back at West Berlin, I saw a new, vibrant city with beautiful wide streets and people walking along taking care of their daily business. There was no comparison between the two. The Berlin Wall had been erected a couple of months before our visit and I could see the wall go through a kitchen from one side to the other, just a foot or two behind the open window. It looked like the East Germans soldiers had laid a "snap-line" across the city and laid a straight line regardless how it happened to go through the buildings. It was just a straight line across the city. I've traveled through much of 1960s Europe, and all 50 American States with my parents, and many Asian countries around the Pacific Rim, in the US Navy. I never viewed any place that appeared as cold as East Berlin that day. I may have made a short visit but I can never claim to understand how the people who experienced it every day felt. My parents both felt that the four children in our family needed to see these things that remained from WWII. They, even then, were concerned that society, in the future, would try to stifle the truth of what happened in that time. They were right... much of that history is no longer in any school curriculum today. Regardless of who made the original comment, the society who forgets their past is condemned to repeat it.
@FolkMagician3522 ай бұрын
The dog being in the Ad Read was a beautiful touch and the captions were sooo good!
@CheesyRavs10 ай бұрын
As someone who wasn't alive when it came down, I appreciate people like you going out of your way to inform people what happened. If it wasn't for people like you, events like these would remain as vague footnotes that were barely taught in school. Thank you
@Kmodoe10 ай бұрын
I graduated in 2019 and I wish I learned actual history... Not what they taught in schools
@SAVikingSA10 ай бұрын
I was 9 when the Wall came down and I feel like it's still the most important moment of history I witnessed live.
@Banthisyoutube-zs6sx10 ай бұрын
I was 6 when dad was stationed in germany from 88-91. My mother was half german and picked me up and put me infront of the tv when the wall was coming down. Didn't know it at the time but i was watching history.......those germans partied their ASSES off. I have a german teddy bear with a piece of the berlin wall in his arms in my schrank and its a good piece with some of the graffiti visible. We sent my grandparents a nutcracker back of a stone mason breaking the piece of the wall.
@bas-tn3um10 ай бұрын
i was 6 my dad almost cried and told me he was so happy that the cold war ended imagine having a child and wondering when the nukes would fly. that was the cold war for millions upon millions of people world wide.
@bas-tn3um10 ай бұрын
me and you had basically the same experience except my father was air force and we were in the states. my dad was very happy the cold war ended. thats beautiful btw lets make sure communism doesnt rise in the west so that they didnt celebrate for nothing. @@Banthisyoutube-zs6sx
@DragonoftheEastblu10 ай бұрын
President Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" Speech, and President Reagan's "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" will always move me to tears.
@boywhohasl1vedhascometodie46910 ай бұрын
Fun fact, that phrase was confusing to Berliners (since a Berliner can be a pastry), and with English, it gets funny. It is supposed to be “Ich bin Berliner.” Nonetheless, in the end, it had the same effects.
@DragonoftheEastblu10 ай бұрын
@@boywhohasl1vedhascometodie469 That is a long-standing myth. Either is fine, and the cheering and tears of those Berliners from his words was proof of that.
@boywhohasl1vedhascometodie46910 ай бұрын
@@DragonoftheEastblu XDDD That is not a myth. That is how the German language works (at least in the Western Part). And despite that, and JFK being a foreigner, who barely understood a bit of German, clubbed together something German that helped him identify himself to their cause, and they still understood what he meant. But still, when that portion of Germany watched it, they got confused.
@DragonoftheEastblu10 ай бұрын
@@boywhohasl1vedhascometodie469 Sorry, that is completely wrong as well. “I am a Berliner” can be said “Ich bin ein Berliner”, “Ich bin eine Berlinerin”, and “Ich bin Berliner”. Furthermore, you are also propagating another myth, that the West-Germans laughed at him for his “mistranslation”. Not four days ago I watched that speech, and you are wrong.
@boywhohasl1vedhascometodie46910 ай бұрын
@@DragonoftheEastblu idk. You suit you. Also, halt die klappe bitte :)
@TheJaybrone10 ай бұрын
If your ideal system is so inherently flawed it results in starvation and murder every time it’s tried the system sucks.
@RaeAguirre-sr8cu6 ай бұрын
capitalism too tho
@bw32406 ай бұрын
@@RaeAguirre-sr8cudo you have an example?
@MichaelC76x6 ай бұрын
This. Thank You
@morgans77046 ай бұрын
@@bw3240 The silence to follow is deafening....
@x-ray34435 ай бұрын
@@morgans7704 i mean im all for capitalism, but im not going to pretend that america doesn't have a homeless problem that everyone wants to pretend like doesn't exist.
@corvusgaming23797 ай бұрын
12:37 The love of a family, and the will of a father sometimes is enough to try something as insane as that is beautiful.
@FlyingElvis10 ай бұрын
I studied this as it took place, I was in the 7th grade when President Reagan demanded the walk to be torn down. I love the fact younger folks know how awful communism is. I have no clue how anyone could ever believe this is a good political ideal. I have German friends that migrated here in the mid 80’s. Their Dad was held captive after being an engineer that was allowed to come over and advise on infrastructure. After about a year he was released. Once released he applied to work in the U.S. and took his family with him. Never returning to Germany. Well I have not seen them since 1993. But his dad would tell us some horrible stories that have me nightmares. No shit, scared the shit out of me that, that could happen here. I am thankful I listened and glad they became Americans.
@erushi550310 ай бұрын
in my country, some young people are getting/being disillusioned by communism right now, and that same group of people doesnt like/hate learning or reading things about history written by legitimate people... and im really concerned, i like my current freedom...
@gavinortengren327310 ай бұрын
The thing is, a lot of younger kids (which i am a part of that group) would rather have socialism or communism, and, from what ive seen, its most of the people who want to shut down arguments against their ideals, and that terrifies me.
@jayjay123454010 ай бұрын
Communism as an ideal is actually in my opinion the best economic model but it will never be possible with humans the way we are. Just like with capitalism in America now human greed and selfishness always ruins things. With communism it just goes downhill faster because of the requirement of government intervention. It would be amazing if everyone worked for the benefit of society, no one had to go without food, water or shelter, or go into life changing debt because of an injury, but it won’t happen until we change fundamentally as a whole.
@twinzzlers10 ай бұрын
@jayjay1234540 I disagree, Jamestown I believe was essentially communist, pure communism, but it lead to their downfall
@varietywiarrior10 ай бұрын
@@jayjay1234540Communism as an economic model is inherently evil because it requires the monopolozation of lethal force by a governing body to impliment.
@scottthomas37929 ай бұрын
The hot air balloon bit is flat out amazing and truly impressive...to build one big enough to lift eight people meant that thing was huge.
@scottbaron1216 ай бұрын
Cubans do it all the time.
@williamdecatur434010 ай бұрын
I had already been stationed in West Germany for about a year when the wall came down. You never made a more truthful statement than describing that block party. But, it wasn't just a block party, it was a COUNTRY party. The West Germans were celebrating like nobody's business. I don't think I bought a drink for a month. They were so happy and so appreciative, I've never seen anything like it. Until the whole Country reunified. I'm not going to describe that here, but I think you can form a picture. Thanks for another great video.
@Sven735246 ай бұрын
My mom remembers that day, she invited all her friends for her birthday and wanted to party, they all were glued to the TV though
@phillythakidd49Ай бұрын
You are my favorite channel!!! Subbed and like from a navy vet!
@Rurik_Luci10 ай бұрын
Why I'm anti communism: My DNA test. They trimmed my family tree very thin.
@joeyuzwa89110 ай бұрын
As a descendant of victims of the Holodomor, same here
@B1gLupu10 ай бұрын
As a descendant of victims of the Molotov's Breadbaskets, same here
@Railhog210210 ай бұрын
Same here, Communism is the worst and thank god America and it's Allies won the Cold War
@Railhog210210 ай бұрын
@joeyuzwa891 Sorry to hear that dude, I had relatives who were victims of the Japanese atrocities during the invasion of China
@antoniogaravo928910 ай бұрын
same here my grand-grand-grandpa (i don't actually remember the exact degree) escaped ukraine under soviet control (post WW2) to not die
@johngillespie340910 ай бұрын
Could you do Witold Pilecki, who got wacked by the commies after infiltrating Auschwitz and escaping 2 years later. He fought in the Warsaw uprising and executed in 1948 by commies. Thanks. Polska 🇵🇱
@Desert_Rogue_Tanker10 ай бұрын
Inmate 4859🤔
@johngillespie340910 ай бұрын
@@Desert_Rogue_Tanker Super gangster 🇵🇱
@thetau486610 ай бұрын
@@Desert_Rogue_Tanker Yes, actually.
@patient_692510 ай бұрын
Intentionally gets sent to auschwitz. Breaks out. Reports to allies. They dont believe him. Gets himself sent back again on purpose. Breaks out again....
@GetDougDimmadomed10 ай бұрын
Witold, Witold, who knows your name?
@JunkyardDigs10 ай бұрын
My favorite random fact about the Berlin wall coming down is that David Hasselhoff was there, singing. Literally Knight Rider yelling english over all the chaos 😂
@lousbk10 ай бұрын
My guy, You don't Hassel the Hoff in Germany. He's a national treasure over there.
@vlotex10 ай бұрын
@@lousbk Barely any Germans care about him. It's more of a joke here rather than a serious thing.
@thedyingmeme610 ай бұрын
Why is Hasslehoff so fucking chaotic lmaoooooo
@johnnotrealname816810 ай бұрын
"I've been looking for Freedom..." There is footage on KZbin of it. I did not realise he could sing so well.
@Ange1ofD4rkness10 ай бұрын
I must find video of this!
@yzwme5864 ай бұрын
Can't believe I've slept on this channel for so long. It's probably my favorite right now, binging all your videos. I wish I had a history teacher back in school that explained things the way you do. Bravo. Bravo!!
@alexmajor657910 ай бұрын
My grandmother is from Germany and when I was growing up here in America she always had a random chunk on display next to all the family photos my entire childhood. Eventually as a teen I asked her why it was there and she said to keep her humble and grateful to be an American as it was a chunk of concrete or brick from the Berlin wall she took after it was demolished.
@Colonel_Overkill9 ай бұрын
My adoptive father has a chunk as well, he was stationed in berlin when the wall fell.
@familyandfriends35197 ай бұрын
Go back to Germany
@familyandfriends35197 ай бұрын
German are never Americans
@familyandfriends35197 ай бұрын
German are
@familyandfriends35197 ай бұрын
Never Americans
@Treacherous_One10 ай бұрын
As a Gen X kid I got to see all of this unfold from the early 70s peak cold war, to the fall of the wall and the beginning of "Glasnost". The Hot air balloon escape actually had a movie made about it called Night Crossing produced by ( of all people ) Mo' Fuggin; DISNEY! I remember seeing it as a kid in theatres. I was obsessed with the wall in my youth and used to read anything and everything I could get my hands on about it. My English teachers got sick of seeing book reports about yet another tale of the Berlin wall from me. Thank fully, my kids learned about communism from me and their late mother ( who just happened to be an MP on the wall in 86 ), and the lesson stuck. Thank you for this history lesson for the ones that may have been not paying attention in the back.
@Banthisyoutube-zs6sx10 ай бұрын
Makes sense honestly in my experience most english teachers are already border line commies......i got along with a grand total of 1 english teacher in my time in an academic setting.
@jameskarg324010 ай бұрын
Im also suprised you didnt bring up The Standoff at Checkpoint Charlie at all, where Eastern and Western Tank crews basically stood barrel-to-barrel at the border, DARING eachother to either shoot or back up a mutual inch. They both opted for the latter, literally inching away from the precipice of World War 3
@Gibson3430885 ай бұрын
@16:00 "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."
@Cool-Tina10 ай бұрын
You know when someone has a sob story about their terrible day, and then they say thanks for a video that took my mind off things for twenty minutes? That's me today. I'm in my forties and not a kid, but it still freaked me out to see my Mom with a ventilation tube in the ICU. So it's not just I had a flat tire and spilled my coffee, and it's not that I needed a giggle for the evening. Thanks for being a quality source of content on the good days and bad.
@tommyblackwell376010 ай бұрын
I know that shock well. Prayers for your Mom, and for you.
@cboyce65310 ай бұрын
I hope you and your family are doing ok
@Cool-Tina10 ай бұрын
Now I'm the one here thanking strangers for their kindnesses. 🫶🏻
@revsellers10 ай бұрын
Prayers for your mom and all your family.
@johnthomas248510 ай бұрын
Praying for your mom, brother.
@djramennoodles10 ай бұрын
Would love to see different MOS videos again like the good old days. Loving the long form videos, though. Keep up the great work!
@jrmbayne10 ай бұрын
Nic, you made me cry there at the end. My grandfather was killed by that Soviet vomit of ideologies they claimed was a government. The wall coming down symbolizes so much more than just the unification of a city, and a people
@briantarr24198 ай бұрын
You have one of the best channels that I have ever seen. Keep putting more on
@brettbaker83576 ай бұрын
Agree. I watched every video in like a couple weeks lol
@WTFisTingispingis10 ай бұрын
"The only thing you have to do to make anti-communist propaganda is to open a history book and read it out loud." I gotta remember that one.
@epsiloncore977210 ай бұрын
Im sure some communist is saying that the history books are written by capitalists so it doesnt count.
@Colonel_Overkill9 ай бұрын
Thanks to your profile pic, I read this in Ryan Reynolds Deadpool voice.
@f1amezof9 ай бұрын
US history book?
@wolfyfitzpatrick54809 ай бұрын
The only thing you have to do to make anti capitalist propaganda is take a photo of any alleyway in NYC or LA
@Danielhuren9 ай бұрын
history isent any kinder to democracy capitalism or monarchism any of them can easily go wrong democracy just provides the best illusion of choice
@williamahrens573710 ай бұрын
My father was stationed in Germany at the time. We went to go see the wall being torn down. I remember there were people selling all sorts of stuff from makeshift stalls. People were hammering at the wall with sledgehammers, as East Germans were pouring through the freshly made gaps. Got a couple pieces of the wall somewhere among all my junk. At 7 years old, it was a defining moment, and one that I'll never forget.
@TheKnuckleneck10 ай бұрын
My dad was also stationed there in the mid-80s, as commander of AFN Europe. We left a few years before the wall came down. Some of his former staff at AFN sent him a piece of the wall inside a beautiful shadow box, and it was one of his most prized possessions.
@Aryasvitkona8 ай бұрын
My mother still has a piece of the Berlin wall somewhere. Ironically she doesn't speak any german at all.
@Drave_Jr.10 ай бұрын
Love all your anti communist stuff. Cult criteria was also amazing.
@forged_10 ай бұрын
Right? He just described the MAGA movement with the cult criteria.
@theangryotaku336110 ай бұрын
@@forged_ it aint just maga. both sides of the US political system have been turned into cults. at this point we should burn everything but the constitution and the first ten amendments and start over
@patrickmcneil508910 ай бұрын
Clown alert
@ronjones-697710 ай бұрын
@@forged_ The only thing YOU forged was your sister-wife's birth certificate. PLEASE show up and block the road somewhere. I've got a truck bumper with your name on it.
@tristianisgaming930210 ай бұрын
@@ronjones-6977don’t go to his level, I don’t think that most people realize that it’s not trump that people like so much but that it’s the fact he doesn’t LIE (I know he does to some degree) to the same extent as every other politician, it’s that he doesn’t need to be a politician like career politicians do, before being in politics he was beloved by most of the public and he didn’t have to risk all of that. I’m an in no way a fan of trumps character or how he acts but it is also refreshing to see someone more truthful on a podium than the career liar-- I mean politicians try at have been on said podium for years beforehand. TLDR: people don’t realize that it’s not trump we like but people who don’t bullshit us like politicians do
@4930driver5 ай бұрын
Loved how you rolled “Wondertwins Powers , activate “ Lol awesome
@4930driver5 ай бұрын
I will drive to have a few beers with ya
@ptprojektred10 ай бұрын
As a german who grew up with two parents from western germany, you can not imagine the absolut chaos followed by the most end of the world party ever when the wall came down. There are obviously pictures and videos of it, but it was such a life changing event that everybody can tell you exactly where they where and what they where doing when it came down. Especially people from east germany, alltho those stories usually involve a Trabi full of Bananas (if you know you know). Thank you very much for covering this, I think its insane that not more people know about this and keep forgetting about this when talking about the failed experiement that is comunisem. Love from germany ❤
@mile301810 ай бұрын
Now I wish I knew about the bananas
@Jensenr8r10 ай бұрын
You can't really call communism a "failed experiment" when it was never tried nor achieved to begin with. The Soviet Union was socialist not communist. Socialism is a mode of production/economic system that can be used as a mode of transition to communism, but that takes a long time especially when outside forces continuously get in the way.
@ptprojektred10 ай бұрын
@@mile3018 Haha, well in the east they had basically nothing, especiqlly no exotic foods, so bananas to begin with, so when the wall came down a lot of people drove across the border to buy all the bananas up because it was such a special thing. Basically everyone you ask has a bananas story, you could say, its pretty.... bananas 🙃
@ptprojektred10 ай бұрын
@@Jensenr8r You didn't watch the video did you?
@Banthisyoutube-zs6sx10 ай бұрын
@@ptprojektredreminds me of my grandma. My grandma had one tiny suitcase full.of memories. She grew up dirt poor in the west after the war. One of her few "treasures" were orange wrappers. I remember saying something smartass about it to my mom when i was younger of why grandma had kept "trash". Typical reagan era baby mentality i had. Mom sat me down and explained how getting an orange was a big deal when my grandma was young. It finally clicked in my 10 uear old head why i always got an orange and an apple in my christmas stocking every year.
@5ch010 ай бұрын
As a young adult, born and raised in former east germany, I can say you did a fucking great job putting all this together. My grandfather was born in a different country than my dad and I myself was born in a different country than my dad. German history of the past 100 years is absolutely wild and many people, both from east and west germany, have still to this day problems dealing with each other due to the fact they were raised and educated in such huge political and social differences.
@bugtesties6 ай бұрын
Watching videos of people escaping East Germany just tells you how shitty it must have been to be over that line and wall
@TheAngryBell10 ай бұрын
The story of the two families making a balloon to escape got turned into a pair of movies, one in German and a couple of years later into an English language movie done by Disney called Night Crossing. Always remember watching as a kid confused why anyone would do that to their own people. Thanks for the video.
@steviemaster10 ай бұрын
As a german who loves the english language i've never heard about that movie! Well, "Ballon", the german one but never "Night Crossing" On my movie-list now!
@zachhinkle757510 ай бұрын
The rants on communism are always hysterical! Keep up the good work.
@peterbolinger630410 ай бұрын
Please explain what he got wrong. :-)
@kylezdancewicz734610 ай бұрын
@@peterbolinger6304hysterical means funny, he finds them entertaining not incorrect
@peterbolinger630410 ай бұрын
@@kylezdancewicz7346 my bad, miss read the tone
@MarkH-e5v10 ай бұрын
I served in the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment from '76 to '80 in Bad Kissingen, Germany. Our unit patrolled the East/West German Border. I was on border duty when those two families escaped in that balloon. They landed in the sector to our north and were picked up by US Troops. I also have many stories about the Iron Curtain and yes it turned East Germany into one big prisoncamp.
@thomashosch93010 ай бұрын
Thanks for your service!
@chuckfinley429210 ай бұрын
Blackhorse! Allons sir, thats a pretty neat story
@PoulsboHoodlum4 ай бұрын
My great uncle was a math professor in West Berlin when the wall fell. He passed away a few days ago. Thank you for your service uncle bud
@stephanieleigh_SassyGunGal10 ай бұрын
"Mr Gorbachev tear down this wall!!!!!!" - President Ronald Reagan's speech in 1987 when he visited West Berlin.. the speech received relatively little press coverage, however it's amazing to listen too Thank you so much for your videos, I still learn so much from them ❤️ Happy New Years🎉
@Reepicheep-124 күн бұрын
Media hated Reagan & thought he was a dangerous threat and would start WW3. (Hey, wait a minute...)
@twohorsesinamancostume760610 ай бұрын
Bold of you to assume that modern day communists would actually think to open a history book.
@MIKE_F4410 ай бұрын
Facts!!
@darthcarnage673410 ай бұрын
Lmfao 🤣 omfg!!! They know their media is fake! But still believe their history books!!! Lmfao 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣maybe look into the other side from their angle and you’ll see who the good guys were
@Dredd-Mau10 ай бұрын
@@darthcarnage6734LMAO "good guys". Good one.
@justanothergmailaccount135310 ай бұрын
To be fair, the Marxists, communists, and socialists that are “writing” a lot of textbooks nowadays are actively trying to white wash the history of communism and socialism as much as they can. They started in the 1960’s or so by removing/obfuscating the fact that the Nazi/Fascist party were, to the end, socialist parties/ideologies.
@twinzzlers10 ай бұрын
@@darthcarnage6734Are you a commie or something?
@BlackWatchKnight10 ай бұрын
I was stationed there with the 690th and was at checkpoint Charlie when the first East Berliners came through. Still have a big chunk of the wall I chiseled out with a piece of rebar I “borrowed” from a nearby construction site.
@artcliff46315 ай бұрын
You left out the best part When President Ronald Reagan told Gorbach to And I Quote "Trae Down The Wall'"
@leroyjenkins205110 ай бұрын
I was there in 1990 (I will not disclose my age) with family helping to take down the wall and still have pieces if it in my home today as well as several memorabilia of checkpoint charlie on display. It was a memorable experience to see german relatives and historic sights.
@MortRouge10 ай бұрын
Perfect intro, man. Communism doesn't know how.
@KravenMoorehead67410 ай бұрын
I was 10 when this happened. I was at an age where I knew something big was happening, but couldn’t be bothered to care. My teacher was from West Berlin and often talked about life there. The next day at school after the wall came down, she was so happy she was crying as she explained it all to us.
@sumus113 ай бұрын
I remember that night, my mother sat in front of the TV and cried with joy.
@mancunian4eva33210 ай бұрын
One of the best things that have come out of 2023 for me is the discovery of your channel. Ive said many times that i love your content. Really hoping you can find a moment to give us a story from the falklands war. Hope you have a great 2024 buddy and i cant wait to see what you bring us in the new year. Quick little addition, communism is the ultimate bait and switch in economics. It promises equality for all but it never discloses that its equality at its lowest level. As in nobody has anything.
@heedneed-arcade597710 ай бұрын
My late grandfather had traveled place to place during his service in the army while the Cold War was still going. He didn’t talk much of his time but he brought back a piece of the wall when he retired. I never knew the significance of that colorful concrete as a kid, but now it holds much more weight than I could have imagined.
@greenofbaron10 ай бұрын
Great video (as typical). You managed to even give some informations that I, someone from Germany who was rather interested in history, didn't know (i.e. the ransoming). Really happy about it all. Yet it won't surprise you that there are a few things that can be added furthermore to it. Let's start with Conrad Schumann, a police officee in East Germany (DDR), who is pretty much the first one to flee over the wall. You can see it in the german UNESCO cultural heritage photo "Jump into freedom" Which shows him jumping across the barbed wire that divided east and west germany at that time. How about that shortly before the reunification the at the time leader of the DDR, Egon Krenz, advocated for "the chinese solution" (Tianmen Square). Last but not least, there's a joke still in Germany "Niemand hat die Absicht eine Mauer zu bauen" ("Noone has the desire to build a wall"), which was said by a spokesperson of the DDR. The day before they did just that. Well lots of text, but in general I just wanted to thank you for not only researching history about your own country, but also for taking a very deep dive into the events of a different country. It (especially the video about the Berlin Air Lift) might be influenced by being able to dunk on Communism, but you could do that with a raw description. Instead you go into detail as to what happened, what else was done and who did what, all of which make your videos highly entertaining and educational. Please keep on making these videos and as we say here in Germany: Guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr (Roughly means "happy arrival in the next year" Or "good gliding into the new year")
@TimeCircleBlue8 ай бұрын
I found this wall of text. I was able to learn interesting facts from it. Thanks for the info! Hopefully you have a good new year too. 👍
@richardhobbs-kv1xe27 күн бұрын
I lived 17 years in Xinjiang province, the People's Republic of China. Your videos are better than therapy. Many thanks.
@forrestcravens934310 ай бұрын
I lived all over Northern Germany for 2 years, a couple of the cities being in former DDR. I had the opportunity to speak with many people who lived through the DDR times and what it was like after the fall of the wall. All I can say is that after all of those discussions, I am forever grateful to have won the lottery in life to be born in the US. Fun fact: the East Germans refer to the DDR times as "before the wind (vor der Winde)" and reunification as "after the wind (nach der Winde)", in reference to Scorpions' song "Winds of Change"
@NoTbAdDuDE13410 ай бұрын
Its not "Vor/Nach der Winde" its "Vor/Nach der Wende" (Wende= change, switch) although Scorpions ARE a sick band they have nothing to do with that one
@bas-tn3um10 ай бұрын
i want to write a book about the atrocities and little crimes of communism.
@tacticalmattfoley10 ай бұрын
When the wall fell and people traveled east for the first time since the USSR dissolved, WW2 battle damage was still evident on many structures.
@forrestcravens934310 ай бұрын
@@NoTbAdDuDE134 well damn, I've been living a lie.
@forrestcravens934310 ай бұрын
@@bas-tn3um gonna be a massive series of books
@brianbackes154310 ай бұрын
Your videos are always a treat. I know you tend to focus on US military history but I think you might find doing a video on the 2nd Pacific Squadron of Russia during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 interesting.
@FractalWyrm10 ай бұрын
I was going to suggest this. Its so dumb.
@jaimegonzalezjr216910 ай бұрын
I would love to hear a video on it, because I don't know about.
@the13inquisitor5910 ай бұрын
Ah yes, the voyage of the damned.
@SuperSpy00bob10 ай бұрын
@@jaimegonzalezjr2169 BlueJay did a video on it titled "The Dumbest Russian Voyage Nobody Talks About"
@jaimegonzalezjr216910 ай бұрын
@@SuperSpy00bob Ah. Thank you for the video.
@hooks463810 ай бұрын
This never gets old!! I remember when I was a very little boy, I was 5, my mom and I watch the news reports on TV and family and friends were calling the house. All saying "do you see this?! Can you believe it?! It was a MAJOR, HUGE moment. I remember asking my mom about what was going on and why this and that. I'll never forget her explaining everything to me but has always stuck with me than anything else she told me was "I means we've won, the cold war is ending, it over, we've won." While we are not German (and I can't begin to imagine how it felt for Germany) she did, like millions of other people on both sides, live with the fear of nuclear war and annihilation hanging over her head her entire life until that point. Anyways, its always been a foundational or core memory for me. Watching that on the news and how happy she was. Yeah, I think it's lost on most younger people how big of a deal this was.
@kayfer22223 ай бұрын
Someone needs to make a video game called "escape from communism" where you play some coyote smuggling ppl out.
@JefferyMccroskey10 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you are doing longer videos. You have become my favorite historical story teller.
@jcg70210 ай бұрын
You've quickly become one of my favorite KZbinrs. Thanks for the great content!
@the_fat_electrician10 ай бұрын
Glad you like it!
@kakka_karot_cake10 ай бұрын
I didn't know any of this until 2004 - My great grandmother who was born before WW2 was part of an anti-nazi resistance and helped Jewish people and others escape Nazism, she did it again after the Berlin Wall came up by planning a series of tunnels and also conducted psychological warfare with her group as a distraction to the guards posted all over the wall. She was the badass of the family
@bas-tn3um10 ай бұрын
you better live up to that legacy communism is tyranny with the veneer of justice. never forget never forgive.
@alicorn392410 ай бұрын
based grandma moment
@kakka_karot_cake10 ай бұрын
@@alicorn3924 Oma was the definition of "F*** around and find out" before it was known
@DaLink2510 ай бұрын
Cool😎
@BustYoDome10 ай бұрын
my great grandfather was god and created life also my dad works at call of duty
@nothingtoseaheardammit4 ай бұрын
Ronaldus Magnus said it best ... "Tear down this wall".
@ProfSir110 ай бұрын
A Fat Electrician's job is never done. Keep up the great work, Major.
@ItsAVolcano10 ай бұрын
There were ways to sneak back and forth if you knew what you were doing. I have an uncle whose Argentinian German and he used to sneak into East German towns by going hiking in the Bavarian countryside and just walking through the border in the un-walled areas. He would then head into local rural towns and buy odd things like weird colas, a chunky but oddly high quality camera, local clothing and other random bits.
@Zeuskabob110 ай бұрын
The history of post-WWII Berlin is absolutely fascinating. Thanks for taking care to share it accurately, I learned a lot!
@matthewwendell32617 ай бұрын
Absolutely love this channel. I’m a teacher and if I could play this stuff in history (or my science class) I would. Keep doing these and I’ll happily watch.
@sturek10 ай бұрын
I was stationed in Spain at the time and remember coming into work that morning and reading the message traffic...and then years later dated a German girl that lived on the other side of that wall in Berlin and when we went there to visit her family it was eye opening to get the perspectives and shown around by people that lived through those days.
@cherylmarquez264510 ай бұрын
I'm so glad I found your channel, I've learned & understood more about history watching you than I did in school. The way you tell the stories with your own twist & so everyone can understand it is the best. ❤❤❤❤
@918Mitchell10 ай бұрын
I was a kid when the wall came down and didn't think much of it at the time. Now as an adult with a family it brings a tear to my eye seeing all the footage again.
@FrankAndrews_DFA37 ай бұрын
Excellent, Joe!!! As a kid, I vaguely remember the building of der Mauer (the Wall) in '62, and I certainly remember November '89 when it came down. Love this episode. Love your channel. KOKO, bro. (That's Keep on keepin' on, bro.)
@Jaloogman10 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing history into such a good digestible way for people. It shines a light on the phrase, "those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it."
@fabiansuckfull944610 ай бұрын
You should seriously make a video on the fall of the Berlin wall. It's as clear cut of a victory of good versus evil as history will provide you with, it's a tear jerker and it's got so many goofy moments of miscommunication that made the whole thing possible.
@Krossfire62310 ай бұрын
Been watching you for a long time... finally had to join and support your Channel. Keep up the great work.
@theincredibleshrunkenbeegu70843 ай бұрын
Nic, I am 69 years old, will be 70 in October. Post Nam Cold War sailor. Spent the summer of 1979 on the IO watching the Sviet Navy watching us, wjile everyone watched the Ayatollah Kahkahmamey take over Iran. I remember the Wall going up. We all grew up hearing the stories of the planes, cars, the hot air Ballon (they actually built TWO...look it up), it was just part of our crazy childhood in the 1960's, along with Viet Nam, Cuban Missiles, race riots, assassinations and Woodstock! But, when that Wall came down, my wife and I sat slack jawed, holding hands, crying and thanking God for the end of the GDR. Hoping that the USSR would not be far behind. It was, than wasn't, now Putin wants it back...my guns are cleaned and oiled! Love your videos, keep it up, we'll keep watching and laughing. ...dude, I'm crying again.
@theincredibleshrunkenbeegu70843 ай бұрын
Hot Air Ballon link en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Germany_balloon_escape#:~:text=On%2016%20September%201979%2C%20eight,successful%20flight%20two%20months%20later.