Awesome 20 part series of WWII photos from the Atlantic (magazine not the ocean)http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/ww2.htmlUpdated every Sunday.
10/3/2011 8:17:03 PM
10/3/2011 8:26:36 PM
i saw these tweeted earlier today. amazing.
10/3/2011 8:26:57 PM
I'll have to send these to my dad, huge Pearl Harbor buff. He was a volunteer diver on the Arizona a bunch of times when we lived there.
10/3/2011 9:36:32 PM
im surprised at how clear some of those photos are. Erie
10/3/2011 10:22:19 PM
10/3/2011 10:30:34 PM
i second lunak's thoughts. impressive. surreal even^ I need that as a poster on my wall or some such[Edited on October 3, 2011 at 10:33 PM. Reason : ,]
10/3/2011 10:32:47 PM
10/3/2011 10:42:09 PM
awesome posti just spent about 30 minutes looking at some of those
10/3/2011 11:34:01 PM
one of these things is not like the other
10/3/2011 11:46:48 PM
^that needs a four frame zoom pic, stat.
10/4/2011 12:18:56 AM
The condensation trails from German and British fighter planes engaged in an aerial battle appear in the sky over Kent, along the southeastern coast of England, on September 3, 1940. It's gotta be weird to see this in real life. Do or Die.
10/4/2011 2:25:40 AM
this is awesome; i'm a huge WWII buff so seeing these pics is really something. thanks!
10/4/2011 8:05:49 AM
Well, thanks for this...my morning is now completely wasted.
10/4/2011 8:07:33 AM
About to be engulfed in a gigantic dust cloud is a peaceful little ranch in Boise City, Oklahoma where the topsoil is being dried and blown away during the years of the Dust Bowl in central North America. Severe drought, poor farming techniques and devastating storms rendered millions of acres of farmland useless. This photo was taken on April 15, 1935.
10/4/2011 8:17:55 AM
10/4/2011 8:26:41 AM
10/4/2011 12:47:15 PM
Guess I know what I'm doing later. Thanks for posting though
10/4/2011 1:34:07 PM
I just pray that they don't cross the streams.
10/4/2011 4:52:41 PM
I read that the Germans and Soviet signed a non-aggression act just 1 week before the beginning of the war.At what point was the non-aggression violated? Did the germans violate the agreement or did the soviets?
10/4/2011 9:46:06 PM
^ Hitler never intended to honor that agreement. He made it to keep the Eastern front quiet for the invasion of France. Stalin and Hitler basically divided up Poland and each took half. Germany invaded Russia in 1941. I just read Storm of War, a fascinating history of WWII. It's scary how close the Nazis were to winning the war. The scale of the war and human tragedy is unimaginable. For example, in the siege of Leningrad, more Soviets died than the entire combined losses of the entire war from the USA and Britain. There was so much fucked up shit that happened. I mean, we were the least fucked up of the participants and we nuked Japan.
10/4/2011 11:15:35 PM
Really great set of photos - a bunch I'd never seen before.
10/5/2011 12:41:28 AM
Although I bet when Germany and the Soviet Union signed that non aggression pact, everyone else in Europe was like "FFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCK!"For some interesting reading, check out the Battle of Stalingrad (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Stalingrad), probably the largest land battle of WWII. According to that Wikipedia page there were about 2 million casualties in the battle alone, and I don't know if that even includes the civilians. Just goes to show you that you should never invade Russia during the winter.(Also, check out the movie "Enemy at the Gates" with Jude Law and Ed Harris. Excellent movie set in the Battle of Stalingrad about Russian war hero sniper Vasily Zaytsev)[Edited on October 5, 2011 at 9:26 AM. Reason : ]
10/5/2011 9:24:22 AM
This is incredible. A 3-4 second long exposure shot taken from an RAF plane over France during a nighttime raid. The amount of gunfire is insane.
10/5/2011 9:25:06 AM
10/5/2011 9:39:57 AM
Three hundred fascist insurgents were killed in this explosion in Madrid, Spain, under the five-story Casa Blanca building, on March 19, 1938. Government loyalists tunneled 600 yards over a six-month period to lay the land mine that caused the explosion.
10/5/2011 9:43:15 AM
10/5/2011 4:00:34 PM
I've seen this one before and it's one of the most haunting photos that I've ever seen:
10/5/2011 4:09:45 PM
10/5/2011 4:16:10 PM
New series released yesterday on the fall of Nazi Germany.
10/10/2011 6:34:43 PM
a+++ thread/link will read again and again
10/10/2011 6:55:40 PM
This is so surreal to me. It doesn't remind me of a war, rather it reminds me of being a kid and playing a tag-like game where you capture your enemy you place your enemy in a pen in your territory.However, sucks that this isn't a game and this is real life.[Edited on October 11, 2011 at 1:22 AM. Reason : .]
10/11/2011 1:20:55 AM
^^^ that's an incredible picture
10/11/2011 10:25:18 AM
New series was posted yesterday. The subject matter is the Holocaust, so needless to say it's pretty somber.
10/17/2011 1:06:19 PM
I started ballin tears when I got to pictures around 37-39, when they showed the german civilians what was going on.
10/17/2011 3:21:02 PM
I think the saddest photos were the ones that showed the emaciated people. Starvation would surely be one of the worst ways to go.
10/17/2011 3:27:40 PM
You know, I struggle everyday to educate people that "life's not fair". Look at the bodies of all those innocent people. You could be one, too. None of them thought it would happen to them. None of them thought the hundred of people standing around them would be executed. Each and every one of them.Americans are just so used to getting their way, that they can't understand that fairness doesn't have to exist. Fairness is a human concept. Humans can easily change their mind about fairness when they have the upperhand. When people cry about not getting refunds because they ate the food they were complaining about, I think of the people who died in the holocaust of starvation. They should be thankful for the food that was given to them in such quality as the poorest, cheapest quality of food served in America.Nobody realizes that WHEN our food supply and cycle is broken in the event of a government or monetary collapse, people are going to go into shock. They aren't going to know what to do. People are going to be killing each other over stale bread. The law of survival kicks in. Our artificial ways of agriculture is feeding and keeping more people alive than what is natural. Lastly,Comparing a teen in the holocaust to an American teenage spoiled brat is one sick joke. If only we could switch their places.[/rant]
10/17/2011 3:42:44 PM
My god. I've seen Holocaust documentaries and read books and stuff but none of them ever had any pictures quite so graphic about the horrors that these people actually had to endure. I can't begin to imagine such a nightmare.
10/17/2011 3:47:56 PM
New series up on the surrender of Japan.
10/25/2011 9:32:58 AM
10/25/2011 10:19:19 AM
I love this one:Pretty wild to imagine how it felt to be a japanese soldier at the end of the war.
10/25/2011 10:25:48 AM
The U.S. B-29 Superfortress bomber "Enola Gay" took off from Tinian Island very early on the morning of August 6th, carrying "Little Boy", a 4,000 kg (8,900 lb) uranium bomb. At 8:15 am, Little Boy was dropped from 9,400 m (31,000 ft) above the city, freefalling for 57 seconds while a complicated series of fuse triggers looked for a target height of 600 m (2,000 ft) above the ground. At the moment of detonation, a small explosive initiated a super-critical mass in 64 kg (141 lbs) of uranium. Of that 64 kg, only .7 kg (1.5 lbs) underwent fission, and of that mass, only 600 milligrams was converted into energy - an explosive energy that seared everything within a few miles, flattened the city below with a massive shockwave, set off a raging firestorm and bathed every living thing in deadly radiation. At the time this photo was made, smoke billowed in a column 20,000 feet above Hiroshima while smoke from the burst had spread over 10,000 feet at the base of the rising column.
10/25/2011 4:49:13 PM
Final entry up:
10/31/2011 9:10:40 AM
^ I read that guy's autobiography. Dude was nuts.
10/31/2011 11:45:08 AM
I'm not sure how you stumbled across that site Mr. Joshua, but thank you for sharing.A+++ thread, in all sincerity. Amazing.
10/31/2011 12:17:19 PM
bttt for pearl harbor day
12/7/2011 12:03:07 PM
12/7/2011 12:15:18 PM
see all the torpedo wakes in that photo? wild.
12/7/2011 4:10:35 PM
I looked through all the pics over the course of a few days lunch breaks. Amazing stuff. Really unbelievable the sacrifices that everyone made. The Greatest Generation.Thanks for sharing Mr. Joshua
12/7/2011 4:14:09 PM
^^ That actually might be the one that they used when they determined that a japanese mini-sub made it into the harbor a few years ago.
12/7/2011 6:18:02 PM