Michael Carter-SinclairMichael.carter-sinclair@kcl..ac.uk
"It might be true that the Germans were ahead. And that's enough to drive them forward." SEE ALSO: 'Oppenheimer': Yes, there really was a nuclear reactor under a football field.The U.S. eventually drove hard. Oppenheimer oversaw a nexus of many of the nation's finest physicists. The...
When Hitler came to power, Germany was hopelessly broke. The Treaty of Versailles had imposed crushing reparations on the German people, demanding that Germans repay every nation’s costs of the war. These costs totaled three times the value of all the property in Germany. Private currency spec...
needed in Denmark. Indirectly this saved many Jewish lives because this might have changed what happened. The council also made news papers for the people to encourage them and to inform them of what was going on. Because of this the Germans freaked. They made blockades in the city, ...
" From "Hitler's War in the East, 1941-1945: A Critical Assessment": In contrast to prisoners of war from other Allied countries, Soviets who survived Hitler's camps did not return to their homeland after the war as liberated heroes. Many underwent forced repatriation, while others succeeded...
He said “Walid, if the Americans one day wake up and discover how we Jews control America, they will slaughter us the same way Hitler did in Germany.” I was amazed hearing this from a Jew. ANTHONY January 27, 2010 @ 4:56 am The Jews know better than anyone else they are ...
The Depression’s pain was felt worldwide, leading to World War II. Germans were already burdened with financial reparations from World War I. That caused hyperinflation. This added to the pressures that ultimately led the German people to elect Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party to a majority in 193...
"Lithuania supported the Nazi Germany during WW2" THE TRUTH:Lithuania never did fightWorld War 2on the Axis side. Adolf Hitler has offered Lithuania to do that in 1939 and invade Poland together, which Lithuania has refused, despite the deep-rootedLithuanian-Polish conflict over Vilnius. ...
1933 was one of the two worst years of the Great Depression—all assets were priced to go at 90% off. In the end, the capitalist-hating socialists ended up treating Koch fairly, way better than the monopolistic thrashing he got from his native land. So you’d think he’d at lea...
After President Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in 1933, the economic state of the country seemed hopeful: Americans were beginning to emerge from the financial wreckage of the Great Depression, and unemployment rates dropped more than 10% in just a few years. In 1937, the nation was hit ...