Berlin during the National Socialist period, historical color footage of the German capital in the late ’30s.
The speaker leads through the main attractions of the city and presents Berlin as a modern cosmopolitan city.
This video partially contains , despite its publication as video of 1936, material probably dated from 1939.
Highlights in the video: Brandenburg Gate, Quadriga, Berlin Victory Column, Reichstag, Radio Tower, 1936 Summer Olympics, Unter den Linden, Changing of the guard at the Neue Wache, Berlin City Palace, Berlin Cathedral, Old National Gallery, Museum Island, Old Museum, Pleasure Garden, Spree, Alexanderplatz, Berliner Weisse, Berlin Zoological Garden, Wannsee, Ministry of Aviation, etc.
“A former high level government official working on banking practices, Willing’s inside stories of the extermination of the Savings & Loan system in the United States by the creation of the money market mutual fund, and how it sounded the death knell for ownership of private property in the U.S., will erase decades of bogus newspaper stories from your mind.” ~ John Kaminski
He also publishes a blog you may choose to visit if interested. Deanna took calls during the last hour with open lines / topics from a few of the listeners, good calls! Richard Duane Willing
Germany’s Declaration of War Against the United States Hitler’s Reichstag Speech of December 11, 1941
It has often been said that Hitler’s greatest mistakes were his decisions to go to war against the Soviet Union and the United States . Whatever the truth may be, it’s worth noting his own detailed justifications for these fateful decisions. On Thursday afternoon, December 11, 1941, four days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hitler spoke to the Reichstag in Berlin. The 88-minute address, which he had written himself, was broadcast to the nation. In it the German leader recounted the reasons for the outbreak of war in September 1939, explained why he decided to strike against the Soviet Union in June 1941, reviewed the dramatic course of the war thus far, and dealt at length with President Franklin Roosevelt’s hostile policies toward Germany. Hitler detailed the increasingly belligerent actions of Roosevelt’s government, and then dramatically announced that Germany was now joining Japan in war against the United States. The day after it was delivered, an inaccurate and misleading translation of portions of the address appeared in The New York Times. Although this historic address should be of particular interest to Americans, a complete text has apparently never before been made available in English.
This translation is my own, as are the brief clarifications given in brackets.
Following the speech text is Germany’s formal note to the U.S. government declaring war, and a short list of items for suggested further reading.