semilog
curmudgeonly optimist
Not to mention undersea warfare and airborne operations.
No joke. If it weren't for Bletchley Park, the MIT Radiation Lab, and American industrial capacity, we would have been in really bad shape.
Not to mention undersea warfare and airborne operations.
No joke. If it weren't for Bletchley Park, the MIT Radiation Lab, and American industrial capacity, we would have been in really bad shape.
...and from the United States, Hitler was enthusiastically and materially supported by many on the right wing, including Henry Ford, Charles Lindberg, and Prescott Bush.
Never forget.
Henry Ford, who hated Jews, ran for the Senate as a Democrat in Michigan. Hard to think he was "right wing" if he was a Democrat.
By the way, my family is of German origin. 😕
My mother and father both taught me never to discuss religion or politics in polite company.
This relatively common lesson, I believe, has led to my rather stunted ability to discuss much of anything important. It's a shame really.
By the way, my family is of German origin. 😕
That's one view. Which might be true.
Here's another view; which might be true.
The Germans frittered away their advantage via internecine rivalries and obsession with boys' toys (that's why we like them so much). The Me 262 looked great but was a logistical disaster - the engines lasted 20 hours, at best. The Gloucester Meteor was a far superior plane.
The Germans invested huge amounts in glamour projects like the V2 and V1 - really, their only value was as propaganda.
German tanks were often wilfully complicated; the Porsche Elefant, the Panther and its needlessly complicated suspension, the stupid King TIger which wouldn't fit many bridges. Compare that to the T-34 and Stalin tanks, which worked!
Where it mattered, in terms of intelligence, the Germans were woeful. The allies kept a fairly successful lead on them in terms of high technology, too; although their bombers had good direction-finding equipment in 1940, the allies, under RV JOnes, soon forged ahead. The allies also had the advantage in short wave radar (then given to the Americans), proximity fuses, Sonar, chaff, and countless other areas. Even though the Germans initially had superior radar, the information processing behind it was pitiful.
Yes, boys' toys are nice, and the Focke-Wolf 190 is a beautiful plane. But even before the Battle of Britain was joined, the Luftwaffe did not have enough production even to make good the natural wastage from Me 109s crashing on take-off and landing and other accidents.
Elsewhere, the exploitation of resources was lousy; communities that could have been allies were victimised, and instead used as slave labour. Whole areas became fiefdoms of local gauleiters, all of whom fought with each other. If it were not for the genius of Albert Speer, the Germans would have collapsed by 1943.
As the photos suggest, these were ordinary people, dressed in silly uniforms, who thought they were geniuses, but were like school kids, playing with fancy toys, with no wider sense of the world.
Henry Ford, who hated Jews, ran for the Senate as a Democrat in Michigan. Hard to think he was "right wing" if he was a Democrat.
My parents always held the opposite view: that anyone who couldn't discuss religion or politics should not be allowed into polite company, as they would be incapable off civility under pressure.
Cheers,
R.
I especially like your last sentence "As the photos suggest, these were ordinary people, dressed in silly uniforms, who thought they were geniuses, but were like school kids, playing with fancy toys, with no wider sense of the world."
😱My parents always held the opposite view: that anyone who couldn't discuss religion or politics should not be allowed into polite company, as they would be incapable off civility under pressure.
Cheers,
R.
Here's another view; which might be true.
I know guys who flew them in Korea (my father flew them, but not on wartime service). They weren't much chop at the air-to-air stuff but, to be fair, the competition (in the form of MiG-15s) was rather more modern. The Meteors did good work at air-to-mud tasks.dont know if its very fair IMO 😉 did Gloucester Meteor ever see active war time use?
dont know if its very fair IMO 😉 did Gloucester Meteor ever see active war time use? but Luftwaffe's fancy ME-262's were pulled to runways with oxes towards end of war. to me it tells Germany lost the war not because lack of good tools, but obvious reasons with top management.
Hitler is often compared to his enemy Stalin. both were totally immoral, paranoid and neither didn't hesitate wasting human lives for what ever imagined reason. but Stalin was cynical and calculating, and when hesitating, he preferred do nothing. Hitler was hothead and gambler who would kept pushing his luck until it ran out.
True enough - aside from the extra 'e' in Mosquitoe 🙂, oh and that it was Tempests rather than Typhoons, for the most part if not entirely. The Meteors, when they became available, really did help as they didn't need to be in a dive to catch 'em. Only saying because I knew someone who was flying Tempests on that duty and really lusted after a chance to fly Meteors, but didn't get to 'till after the war.The V1 flying bombs were engaged by AAA over land, and Mosquitoe, Spitfire and Typhoon aircraft over the Channel, they were controlled by the integrated air defence developed in 1940. Only 25% of the 190 launched each day actually reached there targets thanks to detection, air defence and counter espionage ... even us british can be efficient if pressed hard enough
True enough - aside from the extra 'e' in Mosquitoe 🙂, oh and that it was Tempests rather than Typhoons, for the most part if not entirely. The Meteors, when they became available, really did help as they didn't need to be in a dive to catch 'em. Only saying because I knew someone who was flying Tempests on that duty and really lusted after a chance to fly Meteors, but didn't get to 'till after the war.
The things you hear when you grow up in an air force....
...Mike