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PugJesus

@PugJesus@kbin.social

Cripple. History Major. Vaguely left-wing.

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PugJesus, (edited )
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Unrestricted submarine warfare was actually one of the causes that drew the US into WW1!

Continent-wide war over the future of civilization? We sleep

You sink our money-making ships? REAL SHIT

PugJesus,
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"s-should the need arise"

Yes, Shadowheart, I am sure that's why you were considering that. Necessity.

PugJesus,
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Yeah, rationing was easily one of the most hated things on the British home front. Rationing continued several years after the war and more or less directly led to the Labour government losing to the Conservatives over the issue of continuing rationing.

PugJesus,
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Bread wasn’t rationed but the only bread you could get your hands on was “the national loaf”, which my grandmother informed me was “saltier than unwashed seaweed”.

lmao

Makes one grateful to live in a more plentiful age!

PugJesus, (edited )
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You may be misinterpreting the meme - it's meant to be intentionally silly, anti-anti-intellectual if anything. "YEARS yet no REAL WORLD USE found for counting any higher than your FINGERS" is definitely poking fun at people who think that higher academic notions are useless.

PugJesus,
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Probably it wasn't a great contemporary look, either.

PugJesus,
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"Just because there's a war on is no reason to look slovenly!"

PugJesus,
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They called them Victory Gardens

PugJesus,
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Well, you still had to pay for all of this. It was just additionally limited how much you could purchase - with what is shown here being, then, the 'maximum'.

PugJesus,
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From the site I got it from, "This photograph shows the amounts of butter, milk, bacon, lard, sugar, cheese, tea and jam received by two people per week in Britain."

PugJesus,
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It almost seems like Antarctic and Artic expeditions are a bad idea

PugJesus,
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To be fair, if I'm a failed prototype scientific machine, 'Buried under the shifting Antarctic ice and lost forever' is a helluva grave.

PugJesus,
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abortive
adjective
abor·​tive ə-ˈbȯr-tiv
Synonyms of abortive
1
obsolete : prematurely born
2
: FRUITLESS, UNSUCCESSFUL
3
: imperfectly formed or developed
4
: tending to cut short

The Snow Cruiser was shipped to Antarctica, but it performed poorly and the expedition itself was cut short due to the US entry into WW2.

PugJesus,
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Might be a 'right principle, wrong execution' kind of thing.

PugJesus, (edited )
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The idea was, plop a missile launcher up there and you could get some truly ludicrous range out of it and even fire from cover. Basic idea was sound, but it came with so many problems (speed, mechanical failure, the launcher being an obvious target) that they eventually gave up on it entirely.

PugJesus,
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Dammit, Jim, I'm a historian, not a mathematician!

PugJesus,
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They look pretty distinct to me, but different hairstyles and clothing, neither of which are plentiful here, are often more eye-catching in differentiating people at a glance.

PugJesus,
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Lots of German immigrants in Argentina; Nazi Germany utilized German communities in other countries to spread their vile ideology, where possible.

After WW2, there were also lots of German 'immigrants' to Argentina... though that later immigration wave has more to do with the fascist-sympathizing dictator in charge at the time.

PugJesus,
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After one of those missions, while waiting for his aircraft to be reloaded, Col (Retd) Halvorsen saw 30 German children by the wire fence. He spoke with them for a while and was astounded by how grateful they were for something as simple as a bag of flour.

Speaking with BFBS in 1998, Gail described the children he met, saying: "The children of Berlin didn't have any gum and candy, hadn't had any for months.

"And the ones I met didn't beg for any, I couldn't believe that these kids would not ask for it.

"They were so grateful, thankful to have flour, to be free. They wouldn't lower themselves to be beggars."

The moment moved Col (Retd) Halvorsen so much that he broke the two pieces of chewing gum he had on him in half and was able to hand out four pieces to the children, but 26 others went empty-handed. He said: "They just wanted a piece of the wrapper to smell and then once they got a half a stick, tore off the wrapper and let them smell it.

"And I couldn't believe it for a smell, the reaction."

This chance encounter inspired Col (Retd) Halvorsen to return with more chewing gum plus sweets and chocolates for the children of Berlin.

Following his first encounter with the children of Berlin, Col (Retd) Halvorsen was determined to return as soon as possible with more treats, so that those who missed out the first time could enjoy some 'candy'. He said: "I told the other kids they could come back the next day and ... I'd drop enough gum for all of them to have some.

"Well, we couldn't buy very much gum and candy in the American military, so I'd have to wait a week.

"All week the kids were out there still waving, so I dropped it again and the crowd got bigger and bigger."

A few weeks later, one of the miniature parachutes containing sweet treats almost hit someone who worked at a German newspaper, prompting him to take a photo of Col (Retd) Halvorsen's aircraft and the parachutes.

This was a turning point in the story of the Candy Bomber as the veteran explained to BFBS, saying: "He got a picture of my airplane and the parachutes and my Colonel saw it and he got angry with me.

"He said, 'Why didn't you ask permission?' And I said, 'I didn't think you'd approve it' and he said 'you're right but the General saw it and he likes it so keep doing it'.

"So we got all the stuff we could drop."

https://www.forces.net/heritage/wwii/archive-interview-late-gail-halvorsen-reveals-joy-over-his-candy-bomber-role

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