Full Length | Band Of Brothers | Episode 9
Added 2024-02-05 15:05:01 +0000 UTCYou'll need to sync up your own copy of the episode in order to watch along with us. Watched on Max. Open 2 windows, one with our reaction and one with the video, then arrange them how you see fit! Press Play on "Go".
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Comments
Lipton was discharged as an enlisted man and commissioned as an officer, so he wasn't sent home.
jdunn
2024-02-20 03:05:11 +0000 UTCthe worst part is that there are people who still deny the holocaust happen
Presence Unknown
2024-02-10 16:13:15 +0000 UTCThank you so much for allowing us to experience this with you. And never worry or apologize for crying. I’m in my 50’s, have watched this dozens of times, and still tear up at parts of this series. I’d worry about anyone who wasn’t emotionally affected watching Band of Brothers, and especially this episode.
Craig
2024-02-08 03:40:07 +0000 UTCWhile the journey isn’t over yet, given the emotion of this episode in particular, I wanted to express my thanks to you both for reacting to the series with such empathy and appreciation. We all owe these men more gratitude than can possibly be expressed and I’m glad media such as this will continue to share their story with generations to come.
Ian Forbes
2024-02-08 03:08:37 +0000 UTCKiss is that a stones shirt? 👍
Kevin Cavanaugh
2024-02-06 16:39:31 +0000 UTCAgree. Every person, as a citizen of the world, should watch Schindler's List (1993).
Clay F
2024-02-06 14:02:36 +0000 UTCEdward "Babe" Heffron: "If anyone ever tells you the Holocaust didn't happen, or that it wasn't as bad as they say, no, it was worse than they say. What we saw, what these Germans did, it was worse than you can possibly imagine."
Clay F
2024-02-06 14:00:40 +0000 UTCJust like most of Europe pretending to know nothing about Palestine. History is the best judge!
Ikado
2024-02-06 12:10:03 +0000 UTCThe Battle for Castle Itter, on May 5th 1945 the US army and the German Wehrmacht fought side by side against the waffen SS and Simple History channel on youtube has a breakdown of this battle thats less than 5mins long btw
PlasteredPear
2024-02-06 00:56:53 +0000 UTCIf you ladies haven't seen schindlers list then you should react to it on the channel. It's true story about a group of Jews in ww2 who worked in a factory owned by a German man. It's a very, very tough watch but it's an important movie that everyone should see at least Once. It won several oscars and it was made by Steven Spielberg, who also made band of brothers and saving private ryan.
samcro92
2024-02-06 00:02:51 +0000 UTCThe Germans knew. After the war, many of them pretended to have had no idea - no idea! - about what was happening to the Jews and other groups targeted by the Nazis. But they had lived for 12 years under a regime which broadcasted far and wide that Jews were subhuman, that they preyed on Christian women and drank the blood of Christian children, that they controlled the banks, that they caused Germany to lose the First World War, that they were loyal to Moscow. And no matter where you lived in Germany, one day, you woke up to discover that all of your Jewish neighbors and co-workers and friends had been taken away, that their houses soon got new owners, that their businesses were sold or liquidated, that their temples were burned down or demolished and their cemeteries desecrated. The Germans knew, because many of them actively participated in the process of Jewish eradication. What's more, an almost equal number of people in countries conquered by or allied with the Germans participated in the Holocaust to an extent, from Belgium to Estonia. There is a notion that Hitler was some kind of sorcerer who cast a spell over Germany and made good people do evil things. I think this is self-serving rationalization offered by guilty Germans after the fact, who want to avoid taking responsibility. For many people in the Third Reich, the Nazis' rhetoric just seemed to unlock their ownhidden, suppressed prejudices, and give them "permission" to indulge in their worst and most inhuman fantasies. Others might not have been driven by rabid anti-Semitism, but given the temporary prosperity and patriotic pride offered by the Nazis, anti-Semitism was an acceptable trade-off for them. Either way, their claims of ignorance after the war was lost are not to be trusted, in my opinion.
Patrick Flanagan
2024-02-05 22:18:13 +0000 UTCIn regards to what you said about the death toll, the total is about 11 million. 6 million were jews, which is an oft cited figure, plus an additional 5 million or so who were polish, slavic, gypsies, gays, cripples, and other people the nazi regime viewed as trouble, like anti-nazi politicians and activists.
Flubbedsquid
2024-02-05 20:41:37 +0000 UTCAt the beginning, they talk about how the other side was just young men like them doing their jobs, and how they might've been friends. You also commented that its just people doing their job, and for the most part that is true... except for the SS. The SS was essentially Hitler's own army, and they swore loyalty to him, not Germany. They were truly and despicably horrific, from the generals to the lowest ranking guy. These were the guys who carried out the holocaust, guarded the concentration camps, and committed HEAVY war crimes. Many of them were hung after the war because the Nuremberg Trials found them guilty for crimes against humanity, and Israel hunted those SS members that ran and hid well into the late 1900s . The who Major Winter shot in the Crossroads episode was an SS, and they were the ones that the French were executing at the beginning of this episode. To even join, you had to basically prove your "racial heritage" and swear loyalty to Hitler and the nazis, sometimes over Germany itself. There's even battles in WW2 when the German army teamed up with prisoners and American soldiers to fight the SS
Yash
2024-02-05 20:00:32 +0000 UTCYes many Germans did not know what was happening to the Jewish population. The camps were set up far enough away from real society that most did not know. The towns close to the camps were for the SS men that was in charge of the camps and their families. So the town we see that is close to the camp they for sure knew and the woman that Nixon see in her house her husband was most likely in charge of the camp itself and she is the one that told them they were coming. Even the original German army most of them did not know what was happening to the Jews. They were told to go and fight for your country and spent all the years in either western or eastern Europe(Russia). Even people from nations occupied by the Germans had many people forced to fight for Germany or be killed. So not all soldiers in the regular German army were Germans, some were forced to fight for them after the occupation or they would be killed. Apologies for writing a novel.
Peter Schön
2024-02-05 19:57:48 +0000 UTCOh wow! Yeah I never would’ve known that! 😅 -Kiss
Haylo
2024-02-05 18:14:03 +0000 UTCI hope you watch the real ending We Stand Alone Together, It is just them telling the story with a great ending. You will love it. Thank you as a veteran showing respect. America today has NO idea what people went through for our freedoms.
Jason Allen Wolcott
2024-02-05 17:35:10 +0000 UTCNaive and uninformed people will often make light of rhetoric that dehumanizes people that they disagree with or don't like, whether be it religious, racial, or even political. They have no real understanding of the inhumanity such rhetoric can lead to. It sends a shiver down my spine when I see that same kind of rhetoric being used in modern politics and geopolitics to describe the other side. It is almost like the mantra "never again" just meant "never again, until the next time"
Aldous Orwell
2024-02-05 17:32:06 +0000 UTCLadies, an appropriate reaction to such a terrible and horrendous crime committed on innocent people. Let us never forget. You had a question about Lipton. When he got his promotion to Lieutenant he first had to be discharged (honorably) as an enlisted man and then receive his officers commission. You did see Lipton in this episode now as Lieutenant instead of a 1st Sargent (NCO).
W Gandy
2024-02-05 16:51:16 +0000 UTCLipton was discharged as an NCO and then commissioned as a Second Lieutenant. It's the way it happens with battlefield commissions.
Pixel
2024-02-05 16:31:15 +0000 UTC