I noticed that. I think there may be some AI translation of German in here as well, because of mistakes like calling the weather "he" -- translating German pronouns literally rather than idiomatically.
Goebbels stills sounds silly even when you say it right tho so let's give the AI a pass on that one so the computers can also bond with us over laughing at him
Well, in hindsight it was stupid, but just 24 years earlier, in 1917, Russia had literally collapsed with the Germans standing much farther to the west, in the Baltic lands, Belarus and Ukraine. With that in mind it looked as if it was obvious that the Soviet Union would collapse with the Germans at the city limit of Moscow.
Yes. But that was with internal dissent and revolution within Russia by the Bolsheviks. That didnt happen in 1941 with the iron hand of Stalin and the population all on the same page.....
When a politician gets caught lying to the people, they will shrug their shoulders laugh and say Well that's politics or Sorry I miss spoke or I was taken out of context But when a citizen lies to the government that's a federal crime.
Germany suspected they had lost when they failed to take Moscow in 1941. By Stalingrad, they knew they had lost, but thought they could hold a part of Western Russia. After Kursk, they had no reserves and were running out of everything, especially oil, having failed to wrap it up in Stalingrad quickly and go south to take Grozny and Baku and the oilfields there. It was at that point, Adolf knew he'd fucked up and most of his gang started looking for retirement villas in Argentina
….They didn’t retired in Argentina they were in full throttle setting up “ Pax Americana “ with Pinochet-Strössner-Klaus Barbie-Roschmann-Bormann Network ( Operation Condor)..🫵🏼💀🇺🇸 and the killing keep continuing under the Nixon-Kissinger Administration…
We hv 2B thankful that Hitler would not let his army take Moscow when it cud hv been taken. The high command wanted 2 push on 2 Moscow when it had no defenses, or weak defenses. Hitler wanted mopping up operations instead of the push 2 Moscow. This fatal delay allowed the Soviets 2 prepare proper defenses 4 Moscow. Gen Zukov did this. Just as he did at Lenningrad.
Arrogant, under estimate the enemy, over estimate themselves & over confidence, to sum up. All usually will lead to disaster, fail, break down, defeat, etc.
While going to college in the 1970's, I was friends with a nurse who had been stationed on the Eastern Front. She saw first hand the level of causalities the Russians had inflicted upon the German army, and knew they could not be sustained. THEN she heard that the US had declared war; she concluded that Germany had just lost the war.
@@jeffmcdonald4225 Right up to a point, it was a matter of days before Roosevelt declared war on Germany, the bastard provoked the attack on Pearl Harbour to drag the unwilling USA into the war as his pal Churchill begged him to do and his handler Bernard Baruch told him to do. The official version of WW2 is crap.
@@jeffmcdonald4225 In fact, Hitler did in a lone decision. He phrased it as if the U.S. had started the war. For many Germans, that was the decisive moment. My grandfather heard during a military briefing. The commanding officer commented, "gentlemen, that's about it" and everybody nodded.
@@thiloreichelt4199 The reason for that was to not have an excuse anymore for targeting US ships that were aiding the Soviet Union through the lend-lease with a vast amount of supplies such as oil and equipment, vehicles such as tanks and so on.
Was für ein erbärmlicher Dreck diese Männer und all ihre kranken Kumpane waren. Es hat viel zu lange gedauert, aber ich bin froh, dass sie am Ende beide in den Dreck zurückgerutscht sind, aus dem sie kamen.
There was a case of a German panzer division having not one single tank to attack Moscow. Panzer divisions were dedicated tank and armour divisions. Overextension and logistic lost the war for Germany.
@@GerLeahy no it was the fact that the soviet population was vastly larger. the soviets could throw thousands of more men and material into the grinder. german kill ratios were much better than soviet ones
Unlimited objectives lost them the war. When Imperial Germany invaded Russia in 1914, they didn't promise to kill every last man, woman, and child in the country. The Nazis, on the other hand, gave Russians no option to surrender. And thereby guaranteed unending resistance.
After the success of the Blitzkrieg in the West, Hitler simply started to believe his own propaganda. And as no-one dared to contradict him as he was the 'infallible genius of a military leader', Hitler trappedhimself in his own make-belief capabilities.
No it isn't : Hitler wasn't a military strategist nor tacticus. In Poland he had zero input in the plans to conquer it. In 1940 von Manstein drew up the plans to breakthrough at Sedan and race to sea. When Hitler did interfere he halted the panzers at Dunkirk enabling the bigger Victory to slip away. And already in 1940 the Germans suffered their first defeats with the Battle of Brittain. But Hitler and his propaganda made the Von Manstein plan seem like a plan of a military Genius. It was a gamble that paid off. And the Barbarossa gamble wouldn't. Since then Hitler started meddling in most offensives with the known results. After 1943 and Stalingrad the Germans were only on the retreat.
@@TheMexxodus Nobody here is saying that Hitler was a military genius. It's blindingly obvious that he wasn't. His propaganda said that and the Germans believed it. Fact is, he was a blithering idiot who did exactly one thing well: he gave a great fire-and-brimstone speech to get people riled up and motivated. He sucked in everything he did, it's hard to find a bigger day-to-day failure than Hitler. His lieutenants and military officers routinely disobeyed his orders in order to keep him from immediately steering the ship of state onto the rocks. He had an army of people sweeping in behind him to correct his mistakes without telling him. It's annoying to hear the history books and documentaries always calling him an evil genius, it's questionable that he had even a room-temperature IQ. He's a failed artist that should've moved on to being a waiter like the rest of them. One of the running jokes in the halls of Nazi government: "Hitler is the only person in the Reich who is unaware that Ribbentrop is a rambling idiot because, in meetings, Hitler does all the talking."
If we didn't know any better, we could mistake Hitler for being a lying Socialist Narcissist.... of the type still commonly found leading left wing political parties around the world today.
Before the invasion senior German officers including Paulus ran detailed war simulations several times and each time the simulation ended with a complete break down of the supply lines at 6 months, their solution was to say the war would be over in 3 months.
Here's a quote from a German soldier not far from Moscow : IF THIS GOES ON , WE ARE GOING TO WIN OURSELVES TO DEATH. (THAT WAS FROM A BOOK TITLED THE STORM OF WAR BY ANDREW ROBERTS)
@@jonnyd9351 I didn't mean it per say my point is you can win battle after battle but the other side doesn't give up so you end up quiting or losing or similar. Like Hannibal, Vietnam, Napoleon. Like I said I meant it loosely as in different scenarios but winning battles but then losing the war or that section of a war or operation. I'm sure you could pick holes at what I said and you'd probably be right but I'm just saying it in a certain respect. I suppose I could have worded it different so I apologize for that and I can see why you would say that. But often success after success leads to over confidence and mistakes by many a field commander or C.I.C.
The relocation of soviet industry past the urals and germany indicate command and control was fully in order and relocation of administration would have been similarly successful moscow fallen would not be a fatal blow ?
The generals wanted to capture Moscow because many rail lines and factories were located there and they also thought they could use it to shelter from winter.
Who starts an invasion in June? It was originally supposed to start in late April. The Yugoslav uprising delayed this as troops were bought in to stop it; hence their delayed start.
the greeks and british fought the italians and germans in greece and the greek islands that is why we lost the desert war 1n 1941 by diverting six divisions to help greece which were defeated and had to be rescued by the royal navy and taken back to Egypt and the Yugoslavs changed side against Hitler and hitler sent twenty divisions to defeat them so delaying his attack on russia... dont forget at the start of the invasion of russia they and germany were allies who both invaded Poland on 1st september 1939 starting the war with france and britain
The tides were a factor in determining when D-Day occurred. Once the Allies were on European soil, Germany was doomed to inevitable defeat. One of the motivation for Operation Valkyrie was that the Army realized that Germany should cut its loses in Summer, 1944 and negotiate a peace, Hitler and his cronies did not. @@juliemissick4206
Hitler had his doubts of a swift victory but he wouldn’t admit it to most people. The high casualties did alarm him but he thought “I’ve gone this far and it’s too late to turn back now”. His obsession to conquer the USSR and defeat Stalin consumed him so much that he neglected political duties back in Berlin where he was most needed. This was his ultimate chance to create German expansion in the east and destroy Bolshevism/Judaism. He wasn’t going to lose it, no matter the cost.
Hitler was not an evil genius; he got into power by a combination of timing and brutality, and then demonstrated that he was a fool. His alliances with small, weak countries like Italy, Bulgaria and Rumania, who he thought were great powers, and then declaring war on the U.S., about which he was woefully ignorant, his decision to stay in Stalingrad and other strategic blunders. Intelligence and a psychopathic obsession with Jews do not go hand-in-hand.
doubt it, he was as delusional as it gets. You can blame it on a daily cocktail of amphetamines.. The man allowed no retreat and yelled "countrrattack" until his armies collapsed
Thats right and if you checkout the secretly recorded meeting of hitler with the president of Finland Mannerheim, hitler is very candid about his doubts that he can defeat Russia.
@@duniagowes no I'm quite sure he was the prime minister. But yes he was a military officer from away back. You should listen to the recording of him and Hitler if you haven't. It is fascinating and reveals Hitler as actually quite normal.
In his memoirs, Khrushchev described : “Stalin stated bluntly that if the United States had not helped us, we would not have won the war.” Stalin received from the USA : • 400,000 jeeps & trucks • 14,000 airplanes • 8,000 tractors • 13,000 tanks • 1.5 million blankets • 15 million pairs of army boots • 107,000 tons of cotton • 2.7 million tons of petrol products • 4.5 million tons of food Also the kerosene for the US airplanes, since the Soviets could not produced it . Stalin at the Tehran Conference: "I raise my glass to the American auto industry and the American oil industry."
True. Though if Hitler would try to unite with Stalin instead of fighting him, nobody would defeat this coalition, not even the US, and nothing would stop Germany from taking over everything from Ireland to Balkans.
Goebels the arch realist and cynic , hitler the eternal dreamer , something had to give and it did . Stalingrad and the beginning of the end for germany .
@@TheNelster72 i agree , the german failure to capitalize on Dunkirk , fightiñg on two fronts , Barbarossa in june and not in april , etc . but i believe Staingrad was the Last Chance Saloon and that buffoon , hitler finally made an error , that even he could not rectify or gloss over .
👍👍👍 To add to this, Fritz Todt, Minister for Armaments and Munitions and later (also?) Inspector General for Water and Energy, apparently had a HUGE argument with Hitler during which he stated that from the viewpoint of Logistics, Germany could not defeat Russia. He later died in an aeroplane crash under mysterious circumstances and was replaced by Speer.
Hitler had such power and power at that moment that he did not need any staged plane crash to dismiss a dissatisfied minister. Hitler had such huge and enormous power in his hands that it was enough for him , just to point the finger at anyone, and the SS would solve it very quickly. This is one of conspiracies from that time, but after war nobody from his inner circle ever mentioned or confirm that. On the list of suspicious person responsible for Todt death are also Goering and Bormann. We will never know truth.
Paulus had also done studies and had concluded Germany couldn't win. He was told to do them again and the the right answer. Germany didn't take Moscow because of heavy losses and poor logistics, not because of winter.
I have followed Ukraine news, videos and channels pretty closely for 18 months, …..and have literally NEVER heard anyone say that. Did you reverse the country names, as I did hear a lot of “it’s brave for Zelensky to stay or Ukraine to fight, but Russia will inevitably take over Ukraine in just a few weeks” back when Russia first invaded, but that fell apart almost immediately thanks to Russias own incompetence and corruption.
@@JDDC-tq7qm Wouldn't the west give more support to Ukraine then, so the killings on both sides would continue as now, without anyone getting nearer a victory?
Really interesting video,however you need to learn correct pronunciation of German words/names. No s sound in german....the w is a v sound. Wermacht is pronounced Vermacht. Sorry, mispronounced words bother me. Petty I know.😏
Was für ein erbärmlicher Dreck diese Männer und all ihre kranken Kumpane waren. Es hat viel zu lange gedauert, aber ich bin froh, dass sie am Ende beide in den Dreck zurückgerutscht sind, aus dem sie kamen.
I can swear not long ago there was another well-known {inexperienced, yet arrogant} world leader who also declared victory in anticipation. . On May 1, 2003, this leader stood aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, anchored near the coast of Southern California, and proudly declared the end of hostilities just six weeks after he had given the order to proceed with an invasion. A White House-produced banner boldly proclaiming “Mission Accomplished!” hung conveniently at the proper angle and distance to serve as caption for every photo or video commemorating that declaration. How ironic, eh?! History somewhat repeating itself; again chicks 🐤 being counted before the precious eggs 🥚 have hatched - haha 😆! Oh well 🤷♀️, c'est la vie!
It is easy for a dictator to make the same stupid error twice, because nobody dares to say to the leadership, "Boy, did you ever make a stupid mistake there!" Hitler knew that he had made a mistake, but nobody else reminded him of how big a mistake it was, or what action on his part had resulted in it. If his generals had rebuked him, and had told him, "Never tell our men that they have won a battle before we tell you that we have won that battle!", Hitler would have had an easy rule to follow, but without the rebuke, he did not take note of why he had erred!
However when FDR and Churchill made mistakes, they too were not successfully challenged to not repeat the mistake. True it is more obvious with Hitler, Mus and Stalin with their violent and ruthless secret and military police being right there from the beginning.... But don't underestimate liberal democratic elected leaders ability to crack skulls and arrest opposition without much justification except troublemaker. Look how many people Lincoln had arrested in just Maryland and West Virginia. Look how many people Wilson's cops came down on if they made trouble in 1917, 18
I appreciate your insight, thanks for the video! The 1941 German supply system was partially based on looting and plundering. It didn't work out with winter clothing in Russia, lol.
Terrific video. I'm deeply curious what people in various countries were thinking at the time. I know May 1940 after France fell in 6 weeks Hitler peaked in popularity in Germany. The Nazi Party newspaper Vokischer Beobachter headline "The campaign in the East has Ended!" is exactly like George W. Bush's 2003 aircraft carrier announcement with the "Mission Accomplished" (in Iraq) banner behind him. The boast just before the disaster starts. (The muddy season is the Rasputitsa: a couple weeks in the Autumn and a couple in Spring. Also Napoleon withdrew from Moscow 19 October 1812. So Russian winter? Napoleon left his army in Lithuania in early December. They had 90% casualties by the time they got back to France.) Want to know the moment Hitler's deep consciousness knew his goose was cooked? When they made the premature victory announcement. (Probably for Bush as well.) This is like the kids lined up for the race and one kid tells the others how he's going to leave them in the dust. He has no chance, but might not yet consciously know it, still he'd like at least the taste of victory -- before his inevitable defeat. I like the quotes, "We won the war," to "We're winning the war" to "We can't possibly lose." I was a school teacher, it's amazing how the higher up in the bureaucracy people get the more revealing nonsense they spout. Germany: 80 million was going against Russia 170 million . This while they were still stretched occupying hostile populations in most of Europe and fighting in North Africa. A few years ago I met a Russian who's city during the war made more artillery and tank guns than all Germany did for the entire war, and "we weren't even the biggest producers in the Soviet Union." This is why I like to say WWII was won by the Red Army at Stalingrad and by my grandmother in Detroit making tank parts. Be interesting to dig into Japanese government announcements to the Japanese about their war in China. I don't know that they ever announced a complete victory, but even as late as October 1944 when they pushed south and captured Guilin, they could go anywhere in China. If they didn't win every battle, they could still win the campaign. But they occupied roads and cities, not the countryside. (The study of WWII should never include any of that 'If the Germans had done this they would've won..." nonsense. Instead if the study includes speculation it should be If the U.S. hadn't gotten involved, how long would it have taken the Chinese to grind down the IJA? What would Filipinos have needed to defeat the Japanese occupation? What would a Russian invasion of the mainland of Japan have been like? ) Something else about how we know, and they know: All the photos and films of Japanese atrocities in Nanjing. They came from Japanese soldiers sending their film back to Shanghai to be processed and printed in photo labs full of Chinese workers. The Chinese made extra copies.
Gou‐bells? Ja-del? Time-O-Shenko? Where-macht? These AI narrators are terrible. You would think the makers of a permanent RU-vid record would actually care about details like pronunciation.
If Germany invaded France and Belgium on Hitlers planned day it too may have been a disaster for Germany... but bad weather in the late autumn early winter of 1939/1940 caused him to finally listen to his generals...who had been stalling to avoid a winter invasion. Winter is almost always an advantage to the defenders who are already in place and stocked for it.
@@Blox117 But France had the world's largest army at this time and Belgium was neutral. The key to the attack was that it was a surprise invasion via The Netherlands and Belgium.
Nobody dared say NO to Hitler. Hitler claimed victories or impending ones before they had hppened, and failed to chnge strategies when things stalled. Hitler madebig blunders.... he should have had troops preparing for winter. Moscow in 1941 was an over-reach, but Stalingrad was even worse.
Of one looks at the big strategic picture, you can see Operation Barbarossa was launched between 6 and 8 weeks too late. It was initially planned for late April/early May 41, but was delayed because Mussolini needed German help for his Balkans/Greece campaign which had been almost defeated. Hitler diverted several divisions, including the Parachute Division, to help. The casualties and delays set Barbarossa back to June 41. The early rainfall and early cold snap crippled the advance both on Moscow and Leningrad. The rest is history
One other thing that needs to be emphasized is, by meteorology standards, this was abnormally early and hard winter for the area, as some would say, a small ice age, whether it had something to do with the war causing or not, is still debatable.
It's foolish to waste even a moment inventing ways the Nazis could've won. They could never win. They declared war on a billion people, on the United States and the Soviet Union. They were losers. Everything about them pathetic. They never had the logistics. Not even close. When was it too late for Germany? The moment Hitler was made Chancellor. Robert McKee who lectures and writes about writing wrote in his book Story: 'Everything everybody writes has a subtext. "Happy birthday mom" Subtext: "Please continue to love me." .... There are odd cases though... "Hitler, for example, had no subtext. “Mein Kampf” was not a metaphor; it was a timetable for the holocaust. He stated his full intentions in the text, but because his visions were too horrible to believe, allied politicians spent the 1930s...." 'trying to convince themselves he really didn't mean it. ' (This outside the quote ending is how McKee said it in the Audiobook.) The Soviets were always going to win, The Vietnamese were always going to win, the Chinese were always going to win. The Taliban were always going to win. And the Ukranians will win, the Palestinians and the Israelis will live together in peace (The world is about sick of it. Ask people in Northern Ireland in 1990 if they thought there would ever be peace) I've lived long enough, learned enough history, that these are just repeats. These things are absolutely predictable as they are happening. When we invaded Iraq in 2003 on lies, obvious blatant lies, it was always going to be 'another Vietnam.' I remember the moment 6 weeks before the invasion when I and a lot of other people had the realization, "Maybe there are no WMDs." Up to that point we figured they find a bit of this and that. (And don't waste your time talking about poison gas bombs dug up. They weren't usable.) People and politicians who think otherwise will inevitably convince themselves to repeat the same mistake again, with the same predictable outcome. If only the .... had .... should cause embarrassment not lead to self destructive policy. But take George Bush Senior, "No More Vietnams." He had learned. Crushed the Iraqis in a couple of days, didn't bother with the self destructive occupation nonsense, got the Saudis to pay for all of it. If he repeated anything it was D-Day 5 June 1944. His son then fucked up.
Learn how to pronounce German. Also, don't show footage from different times and places from the ones you're talking about. For instance, you keep showing Hitler speaking at the Sportpalast when actually and obviously he's speaking at another time in the Reichstag.
The bot voice was pretty good but it doesn't switch to German pronunciation when necessary. Hearing about Colonel-General Joe-del and the ware-marked is a bit grating.
I read somewhere the reason why the German military wasn't issued cold weather gear was because the astrology "experts" said it was going to be a warm winter.
Oh? They also had climate crazies back then? I always thought the reason was that they were going to win very fast and in late autumn they would be back home after defeating the soviet army
By invading Russia, Hitler made the same mistake that Napoleon made a century earlier--and suffered the same fate. Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it.
Wow congrats I’ve never seen such a fresh take. And Russia definitely didn’t lose any wars on their western border between napoleon and Hitler. Oh wait they did in 1919. I’m sure you’d know that being such an insightful history expert
@@jonnyd9351 To be fair that WAS Hitler’s biggest mistake. From the second he did that his life and country were doomed to fail. It’s not about not repeating history though. Germany could’ve invaded the USSR successfully if they weren’t fighting the allies. At least he didn’t say “don’t invade Russia in winter”
@@liminalcriminal_ Saying invading the soviets was hitlers biggest mistake is like saying ceding from the Union was Jefferson Davis’s biggest mistake… the whole point of the war was to take land from the east for Germany.
This is fine and a good video but please please please either read it yourself or pay someone to read it - having automated voices is destroying RU-vid
It’s amazing we still have videos coming out rehashing the same things over and over again. I guess there’s never not a demand for things nazi related. Good job Keeping it going.
Its not only the rehashing,countries ARE STILL crossing borders and creating mayhem....where have all the flowers gone...when will they ever learn..when will they...
Pretty stupid. They were supremely overconfident fueled by Hitler's racism that made him totally underestimate the Russians because they were Slavs. Another great video.
Good video but your computerized script reader is rather obvious with the many mis-pronounciations. How about spending a bit more for a real human to do the narration?
Agreed! I've been binging videos on Barbarossa, Stalingrad, Kursk, etc, right through to the capitulation of Berlin in 1945, and thought I knew most of the story but this was all new to me! I can vividly imagine how these two proclamations of "victory" would destroy the German people's trust in Hitler and Goebbels. While they tried to change the story after the announcements, people would not forget. It's just the same in our personal and business lives - when someone tells us definitively that something important is "finished" then we become very wary of them after they backtrack. I even make a point running my business that I never tell a client that I have "done" something until after it is all actually "done", even if I am very confident that it's "nearly done" because I am wary of having to say later "oooops..sorry..".
I really dislike having American commentators/narrate for these kinds of programs...they almost inevitably mispronounce individuals' names and place names. General Jodl, for instance, is pronounced "Yo-del" as Js in German are pronounced as Ys. "Wehrmacht" is pronounced "Ver-macht" as in German, Ws are pronounced as Vs. I'm a native English speaker, but if you're going to pronounce these things correctly, it doesn't take much effort to get them right. The rest of the program was well-done, but please do your homework on pronunciation and/or get a European who understands these things to do your narration. These errors degrade the credibility of the efforts to make your presentation both look and sound professionally done. Thank you. Just hoping to help improve the excellence of your videos! 😊
Everyone, BUT hitler knew they had lost the war. On December 8th, 41! Even before the war, hitler dismissed the USA as too weak and complacent. We couldn't have defeated Germany on our own, but we were the glue that held the allies together!
Gobbles the propaganda minister.Propaganda has a very negative vibe.What was his real title .Minister for information? Surely any thing other term propaganda.
Was für ein erbärmlicher Dreck diese Männer und all ihre kranken Kumpane waren. Es hat viel zu lange gedauert, aber ich bin froh, dass sie am Ende beide in den Dreck zurückgerutscht sind, aus dem sie kamen.
They documentaries always act like the Germans were the only ones experiencing cold and Russians did not. Same weather on both sides. The Russians fought for their motherland better than the Germans.
Not being ready for the fight in the east, having the tigers, ferdinands, panthers not until summer of 43 and in small numbers. Not realizing winter which they have in Germany too! Barbarossa should have been started in early spring of 41 then they would have had Moscow before winter arrived. Too much victory in their heads but on paper not possible
The robot pronunciation of German words & names throughout the narration was heinous, which is one of several reasons why the second I hear a video being narrated by a robot, generally I usually instantly click away; not to mention cadence and inflection problems. However, the poor pronunciation throughout this video were so hilariously & hysterically bad; like a train wreck, I simply couldn’t turn away.😂 Your actual human voice & speech couldn’t possibly be that bad, man.
During a meeting among the top brass, Halder told Hitler that there were 1,000,000 more Soviet troops northwest of Stalingrad. Hitler denied it. Halder stalked out of the room and was demoted.
@@tomassmolen9443 Hitler being incompetent? Yes. That's why the Allies never tried to assassinate him. They were afraid he'd be replaced by someone better.
Correct. In my study I recognized that the German army was not so much defeated, because Rzhew 1942 was a bigger operation than Stalingrad and Germans won that battle. It was the Romanians that lost at Stalingrad. Kursk was a draw, because Hitler unlogicaly withdraw won battle. So, if you read twice you see that German army lost only in late 1944, the sixth year of war. It is very good report card altough@@jguenther3049
RU-vid videos aren't even worth watching anymore unless they're hosted by real live people. The whole platform is being taken over by these damn AI generated videos and TTS narration that can't even pronounce words correctly.
In addition, German people & High Command saw Hitler as their infallible god. God Hitler while thousands of miles away began overruling commanders on the battlefield, the end was inevitable.
This kind of reminds me when CNN is on the streets where building are literally on fire in the background, people are rioting over the lies they are told, and they still tell us it’s “peaceful protesting”.
If you can't even pronounce "Wehrmacht" (2:50) properly, I'd say it was probably time to get out of the "making WWII documentaries" business. Vare-makt, not Where-makt.
@@Karl-nv5ok I did wonder, but concluded it wasn't -but if so, it's very good AI. It's still not very good _German_ though; and for a WWII documentary, I'd continue to suggest it's a deal-breaker :)