- Messages
- 20,964
- Name
- Pete
- Edit My Images
- Yes
You have no idea what they thought or what they did....oh...wait...
and neither do you - but their actions suggest support for the reich (per posts above)
You have no idea what they thought or what they did....oh...wait...
And anyone under 14?
Really? So after an argument, you've never realised you were in the wrong and apologised.
.
the boys were mostly part of the deuchtes jungvolk arm which was pretty much the same thing but for younger kids (and buy 1945 rules had been relaxed and kids as young as ten had taken up arms)
I'm not sure what planet you are on most of the time - but apologising imediately after an argument for something you did yourself, is completely different to expecting an apology for something your grand parents generation did 70 or so years ago - only the latter qualifies as 'the concept of retreospective apology.
Not the ones in Dresden obviously, because they'd been killed by bombers.
What are people arguing about now ... actually, I'm not interested as I have only watched the first Indiana Jones movie and am still none the wiser as to the Nazi's religious beliefs.
In 1919, Hitler attended his first meeting of the German Workers' party, an anti-Semitic, nationalist group as a spy for the German Army. However, he found he agreed with Anton Drexler's German nationalism and anti-Semitism.
no - read my post again , I agree its likely that resistance fighters would be informed on wherever they were - however that didnt stop resistance movements forming in nearly all the occupied zones - ergo the reason for the limited resisytance in germany could only be cowardice (which seems unlikely) or that actually the vast majority of germans supported the reich
Do you actually have shares in wiki? (Or on staff?)![]()
Or perhaps an entirely different reason, commonly known as self preservation
Apologising immediately after an argument us doing so retrospectively. Your definition.
Yes, I do Including my relatives of a previous generation.(the only good German is a dead one)
Don't start regarding the Japanese.and their involveent in WW2
And see earlier post re Mrs. Pertwee
Mr Pertwee - whom I've never heard of
sigh - its self evident what i was talking about , just as it is that you are arguing for the sake of it
however apologising when an apology is called for is not retrospective , apologising 70 years later on the other hand is - go and look it up in the OED
Ah the eponymous moose sigh....when real language just won't do.
And to save you the searching, retrospective simply means looking back on events. There's no time frame.
Definition of retrospective in English:
ADJECTIVE
1Looking back on or dealing with past events or situations:
eponymousɪˈpɒnɪməs/adjective(of a person) giving their name to something
Oh and the definition of past is anything not in the present.
And a sigh is only effective when expressed physically.
Just so you can sleep tonight.
Get a room you two.
so you've just proved my point - retrospective looks back on past situation not those in the present.
Viv, stop wasting your time, Pete read Warlord, Victor and Commando comics as a kid. He knows everything about all things. I'm surprised that you have not grasped that fact yet.Past:
noun1.the time before the moment of speaking or writing
Moment....not hour, year or generation.
I'm sure viv1969 would supply itI'd rather drink a pint of my own vomit... or someonelses
OK. Conversely, I've never known anyone of the wartime generation with such a lasting and visceral hatred of the Germans. I do know a few Jewish people of my age (early 60s) who lost family members in the camps, murdered by the Nazis, and I wouldn't say that they harbour any warmth towards Germans, but they don't hate them either.
I hadn't even thought about doing so, but I might, now that you've brought it up. Please don't try to tell me what I may, and may not, do on the forums. That's reserved to the staff/mods and, as far as I know, you're not one of them.
I did. Someone made a derogatory remark about "krauts" and Mr Pertwee - whom I've never heard of - was offended because his wife is German. So what?
the boys were mostly part of the deuchtes jungvolk arm which was pretty much the same thing but for younger kids (and by 1945 rules had been relaxed and kids as young as ten had taken up arms)
Martyn, my late uncle was captured by the Japanese in Burma. He worked on the infamous railway (Bridge over the River Kwai and all that), and he saw sights (torture and beheadings of prisoners - ISIL are the "new Japanese"), that he never could forgive the Japanese for what they had done.
He was an intelligent man, but any mention of the Japanese brought out an anger in him.
I suggest that there are many people belonging to the Jewish communities and others who feel the same way about Germans.
and the one most important point you have failed to mentioned i that is was mandatory for all children to join, I wonder what the penalties
were for parents/children that didn't comply , a bit tougher then our conscientious objectors I bet !
Say what you like many children are susceptible to peer pressure:
“These boys and girls enter our organizations [at] ten years of age, and often for the first time get a little fresh air; after four years of the Young Folk they go on to the Hitler Youth, where we have them for another four years . . . And even if they are still not complete National Socialists, they go to Labor Service and are smoothed out there for another six, seven months . . . And whatever class consciousness or social status might still be left . . . the Wehrmacht [German armed forces] will take care of that.”
—Adolf Hitler (1938)
I am glad that someone else has posted regarding Japanese POW's who actually had a relative who was one. The Japanese joined WW2 by bombing Pearl Harbor which brought the USA on board as well.
....... he was another one with an abiding dislike of the japanese (and their german allies) and would not have japanese or german goods in the house.
It was a disgusting and vile attack on civilians.
Churchill and his generals should have hung for it.
These things happen in war.
Why its being discussed generations after the event beats me. Life moves on.

"thanks for saving us from incaerration and a slow and horrible death, but hey we don't like the way you did so we're going to accuse you of war crimes" :banghead:
did they ? I thought it was the japanese invasion of china in 1937 that kicked off WW2 in the pacific , and the axis pact (japan italy and germanay) was signed in 1940
.
yes I should modify above post, that indeed Japan declared war with China in 1937
The generally agreed date for the start of WW2 was 3 sept 1939 by Britain following Hitler's invasion of Poland and the japanese joined forces withh Germany by the axis agreement and were soon a threat to Allied shipping in the Pacific
The significance of Pearl Harbor is that it came out of the blue (though questions have been asked regarding were the Americans totally unaware) the significance was to change the US stance regarding WW2 and it promptly declared war on Japan as well
Most historians think of the Spanish civil war as the opening of ww2
depends how you look at it you could say that the japanese invasion of manchuria in 1931 was the start of it
you could also make a case for the beer hall putsch in 1923 , or Mussolinis march on rome in 1922
depends how you look at it you could say that the japanese invasion of manchuria in 1931 was the start of it
you could also make a case for the beer hall putsch in 1923 , or Mussolinis march on rome in 1922
Or the Treaty of Versailles in 1919?