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#41
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
Quote:
Thank you, very much, for your detailed answer. You are right. I should learn to at least read German. I can read Polish. I can also read Russian but only if it is in English characters, not Cyrillic. Thanks again, Ed |
#42
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
I too get a bit tired of Hitler's this and Nazi that, but can anyone reliably separate state and party under National Socialism? The NSDAP and its Führer claimed to embody the national will - or some such mystical BS - and preached »Gleichschaltung« (bringing everything into line) so where does one draw the line?
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#43
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
I do not know anything about that but if so many errors can be found on just one page of the first chapter of the book, one must be excused for wondering. Quote:
I sense an unfriendly tone here. Peter Achs posted his message on a German language forum, so why should it be in English? Anglo-American versus German authors In my opinion there is little difference when it comes to accuracy (by the way I am Swedish). A fresh example: William Green, I think it was, once invented aircraft versions and designations that are complete fantasy and many authors have reiterated these, again and again. In the latest issue of the German magazine Jet & Prop there is a photo of a Heinkel He 45 and in the accompanying caption the German author (the editor?) tells us that the first flight was in 1932 (it was not), and that the "He 45b" built by Gotha was designated "He 45C" (the He 45b was a modification of the He 45a and both that, the He 45B and He 45C were built only by Heinkel). In addition it is likely that the photo shows a He 45D and not the He 45C. Quote:
I do not agree. Quote:
We are talking about history here and Peter's main criticism was not about the author's language skills. An author has a responsibility towards the reader and if even facts that can easily be checked and verified are wrong, then criticism is justified. For example, on page 22 Udet is said to have imported three Curtiss Hawks. There were only two and I have never seen a source maintaining that there were three, so where did that come from. I know very little about the Ju 88 - that is why I bought the book. I was interested to see the colour profile of D-AXVM on page 71. When checking the caption I see that the c/n quoted is 088050. As far as I know D-AXVM was c/n 0885025. Lennart A |
#44
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
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rubbish .....part of the very first sentence of Achs' commentary reads (quickly, cos I can't be bothered to translate it word-for-word for you..) " .. here's proof that non-Germans can't write about German aircraft...". AFAIK Medcalf wouldn't even consider himself an "historian", he's an engineer, that's the approach this first volume takes...unfortunately with his typos he leaves himself open to the charge by the likes of Achs that as he doesn't know German - or indeed is not a German - he's somehow incompetent... |
#45
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
Lennart A. questioned where did certain pieces of info come from. Interestingly, when reading the book I was quite surprised by the scarcity of source notes. Surprised because usually authors with engineering background are quite comfortable with copious source noting. This same issue concerned me greatly when I read the Ju 87 book by the same publisher and compared its source noting to the very proper source noting in Daniel Uziel's Arming the Luftwaffe.
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"No man, no problem." Josef Stalin possibly said...:-) |
#46
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
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Nick, I don't mean to derail but who produced all the aircraft, mined and refined the metal and built the electronics and optics? Hitler? Who backed him? Industry and science were thrown into a war footing long before Hitler - as wild-eyed spokesman - was brought in. And there was more than one attempt to kill him during the war. Krupp Thyssen Siemens GEMA Telefunken Zeiss I.G. Farben Best, Ed |
#47
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
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I always wonder when someone writes 'Nazi' aircraft, did he somehow find that particular aircraft's party membership card? ![]()
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Dénes |
#48
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
I don't disagree Ed. I was merely pointing to the Nazi Party's claim to somehow embody Germany's (supposed) will or destiny. It was all a load of cobblers, obviously, but influenced the way many still write about it all (so we're still on topic, just!). Party organisations did subsume or duplicate functions of the state, so untangling the strands isn't easy.
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#49
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
Nick,
As with any war, at least until the Korean War, the conflict had to be sold to the common man who would fight and die with the fancy hardware built by someone else and profited on by others. With the greatest respect for the sacrifices made by the British, how did the home press recount the First World War while it was going on? It was only a bit later that the true picture of the carnage would emerge. Without making any direct connection to Hitler - he was the front man, the carnival barker, the necessary fanatical voice with a propaganda minister who "sold" the war by any means necessary. Fatherland. German unity. Whatever would appeal to the people and inspire the Jungvolk, the Hitler Youth, those who served in the the RAD and DAK who had a reason to believe. In a bit of black humor, I watched a short movie where three men agreed that "there's no money in peace." so they plotted a war. Best, Ed |
#50
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Re: Ju-88, Volume One
of course not, because there was no such thing as a "Rooseveltian ideology". Nor did the "democrat regime" (again a complete non sequitur in English) launch a war of aggrandisement on the back of the militarisation of an entire society, that led to the violent deaths of millions. The Nazis did and German industry developed the Ju 88 family (along with much else) to help them do it... I don't think Medcalf is writing sloppy journalese there, but he is stating the obvious! Looks like it needs re-stating too (Hitler as "wild spokesman" ? a mere 'tool' of Germany's big industrial concerns? C'mon Ed! )
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