Albert Speer - The Führer's Architect Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
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    #Biography #History #Documentary

Комментарии • 796

  • @PeopleProfiles
    @PeopleProfiles  2 года назад +38

    If you liked this video please check out our new biography on Eva Braun ruclips.net/video/T4QxtVhV_4o/видео.html

    • @marcdelente2456
      @marcdelente2456 Год назад

      Merci pour ces formidables documents sur la haute sphère national socialiste.
      Merci a vous car il y a des choses que je savait pas sur les hommes prochent du fureur.

    • @g.f.w.6402
      @g.f.w.6402 Год назад

      All German words/names mispronounced. A visit to the dentist is more pleasant than hearing that. How are you going to tell anything about German history?!

    • @timokk3
      @timokk3 Год назад +1

      What's the deal with the thumbnail of Albert with a five o'clock shadow?

    • @franciscoflores9504
      @franciscoflores9504 Год назад

      Please trasládenla in Español es muy buen documental

    • @gez3345
      @gez3345 Год назад

      ​@@g.f.w.6402 Calm down. What are you? The Jestapo?

  • @wolfu597
    @wolfu597 Год назад +13

    Some historians says that Speer would have been an excellent poker player. He accepted some guilt but not all of it and "appoligized" for his involvement in the Nazi regime.
    When in reality, his main priority was to get himself out of hangmans noose, which he did.

  • @catman8670
    @catman8670 2 года назад +335

    Speer was a smart opportunist, he knew what he was doing from the start

    • @ww4102
      @ww4102 2 года назад +21

      As they all knew

    • @inka87871
      @inka87871 2 года назад +11

      Hitlers favorite handsome artist Hitler admired him..

    • @gusbuckingham6663
      @gusbuckingham6663 2 года назад +29

      I find it interesting that Goering ranted about Speer being a coward... and then killed himself.

    • @jazzaman147
      @jazzaman147 2 года назад +10

      Cat Man I agree i read his book inside the third reich Very exitenstive look into Hiters Innner circle

    • @MrBenedict1820
      @MrBenedict1820 2 года назад

      @@gusbuckingham6663 0

  • @IMDunn-oy9cd
    @IMDunn-oy9cd 2 года назад +19

    Speer knew. His denials were lies.

    • @IMDunn-oy9cd
      @IMDunn-oy9cd 6 месяцев назад +3

      @user-wj6dt5bq3w He claimed that he wasn’t aware at the Nuremberg trials of the treatment of the Jews. But, he used them in his factories. He definitely knew what was happening.

  • @ethanramos4441
    @ethanramos4441 2 года назад +151

    “One seldom recognizes the devil when he has his hand on your shoulder”
    Albert Speer

    • @legiran9564
      @legiran9564 2 года назад +21

      @Nobody Well said. And that applied to everybody who worked closely with Hitler.

    • @taranullius9221
      @taranullius9221 Год назад +5

      He knew. He wanted more slave labour. He was also at Posen.

    • @edlawn5481
      @edlawn5481 Год назад

      @@taranullius9221 I just think he was spared because they wanted someone from Hitler's inner circle to interview for the future war documentaries.

    • @seanohare5488
      @seanohare5488 Год назад

      Haunting

    • @prosequence2536
      @prosequence2536 Год назад

      @@legiran9564 sure... but this denies that before this it takes more than just happenstance to where between the id and superego is not you, but the devils hand alone steering you where it will... what must first be turned away from and ignored before that alone heavy hand is all that guides you... only well said if the prior is ceremoniously ignored, than its inevitable but may not have always been... its true, but not well, its strategically said

  • @cicikierstin4982
    @cicikierstin4982 6 месяцев назад +6

    My great grandfather was his guard during the Nuremberg trials. Learning more about him is interesting.

  • @andrewcoons8060
    @andrewcoons8060 Год назад +11

    Why was the USSR allowed to invade Poland with out a declaration of War from the Allies?

    • @thekingofawsome21
      @thekingofawsome21 5 месяцев назад +1

      Russia did and does what it wants

    • @DavidRafaelSutton
      @DavidRafaelSutton 3 месяца назад

      The USA didn't need a reply in order to declare war on Poland I think it was 39 Germany or might have been 1940 Germany made a treaty with the USSR prior to world war II right and they made the agreement that they were both Germany and the USSR invade Poland Denise country with takes a parts that agreed on a custody of a Polish land and a year after that Germany Winx on its treaty with USSR and launches the Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the USSR by Germany so Hitler did this in order to buy some time the go after other countries IE France and whatnot so they wouldn't have to fight a two front door so there was no allied alliance prior to Germany declaring war on the United States that's a simplified explanation about our involvement but yeah so no allies no USSR Britain and the United States fighting yet so the USSR was not an ally of the United States prior to the invasion of Germany into the USSR what we should have done was a moved against the USSR when we saw that the USSR was not letting any of the other allied countries step into Berlin occupied by the USSR it took like a month or so before American or British troops were able to go see and tour Berlin because the USSR was not letting us into Berlin so yeah we had the power and the resources to have gone after the USSR the only reason the USSR kind of won the war is because we supplied them with everything they needed in material to fight the war liquidation we armed the USSR during world war II they probably would have beaten North Germany by themselves but it would have taken a long long time because early on they didn't have the resources to replace what was being lost anyway I'm all over the place with this answer to a question it's accurate the flying details not so accurate but the but the reason why there was no permission asked by the Allies to invade Poland is the accurate sincerely Bob the blind bedroom guitarist PS they should have hung spear with the others

    • @tommcg7564
      @tommcg7564 2 месяца назад +1

      Because Russia was with the entente before they capitulated in 1917. Germany had caused millions of allied deaths in WW1 and ultimately broke the Treaty of Versailles by increasing their arms, invading Austria, the Sudetenland, the Danzig corridor and invading Poland with Russia before going on to invade intercontinental Europe on their own.

    • @BrianFoster-ji9fp
      @BrianFoster-ji9fp Месяц назад +1

      Maybe it's got something to do with public opinion. Nazi's posed a more imminent threat.

  • @cathleendelorenzo205
    @cathleendelorenzo205 2 года назад +51

    I laughed when you mentioned that the Speer children were not allowed to use the main staircase. My childhood home also had such a dual stair situation, and we children were expected to use the “back stairs”, too! I suspect both pairs of parents wanted to preserve the carpets in the main area. We accepted it as normal and seemed to have survived relatively unscathed. 😊

    • @noldo3837
      @noldo3837 2 года назад +6

      Regarding carpets, my grandad was a farmer, working "from sun to sun", in Bohemia, Czechoslovakia, but he had persian carpets over most of his village house... Now thinking backwards, I totally dont get, where did he get them.

  • @craftsman40
    @craftsman40 2 года назад +274

    Albert Speer's intellect and "strength of character" does not strike me as one who falls under the category of naive blind obedience. He is more like a refined ambitious, manipulative and calculating person. Refined and sophisticated but nevertheless is a Nazi in his heart.

    • @caryblack5985
      @caryblack5985 2 года назад +49

      @@algini12 He knew the conditions. People were starved and worked to death and he helped to set up these conditions.

    • @caryblack5985
      @caryblack5985 2 года назад +46

      @@algini12 They were systematically starved and worked to death. When they died they were replaced with other concentration camp slaves. They did not care if they died there were others to take their place. And many died because he used the SS for guards who could care less if prisoners perished through their brutality.

    • @markbossuah284
      @markbossuah284 2 года назад +36

      @@algini12 But maybe the fact that soo many high ranking Nazis were not sentenced to death is the issue? Speer has at times even claimed to be Hitler's only true friend. With that kind of insight one would think Speer would have done more! Speer did say sorry at the trials, which obviously went a long way in him not going to the gallows, but we should not act as if Speer was a victim of circumstances. He supported the Nazi regime through and through and is lucky to have just gotten 20 years.

    • @michaell2254
      @michaell2254 2 года назад +17

      The barbarity of the Nazis is obviously too be abhorred. They were the most heinous regime in history, perhaps closely followed by Stalin’s, and their key players were contemptible. However, Speer was different from the rest as he was an intellectual ( perhaps along with Canaris), and showed genuine remorse once he started serving his prison term, although his best selling book “Inside the Third Reich” to some extent was a self justification. The world subsequent to 1945 did desperately need to understand how the Hitler regime came about and why it was allowed to continue for so long. In this context, there were certainly advantages in allowing Speer to live (as long as he did pay for his crimes in the form of his 20 year jail sentence), as he did play a crucial role in contributing to that understanding. This is not to excuse him, but it did help common humanity in ensuring Hitler never happens again.

    • @caryblack5985
      @caryblack5985 2 года назад +16

      @@michaell2254 He may have shown some remorse but in his memoirs he did deny and minimize what he knew and tried to make himself look less knowledgeable regarding he Holocaust. He also used slaves that were starved and worked to death. A lot of what he wrote was tp try to make himself less complicit with the atrocities.

  • @ArchibaldBagge
    @ArchibaldBagge Год назад +21

    He was the smartest man in the room at Nuremberg..

    • @stefanobregante5633
      @stefanobregante5633 Месяц назад

      Not quite right according to the IQ of the Nazi officials of the Nuremberg trials.
      Hjalmar Schacht was the smartest with an IQ of 143. Hermann Goering had an IQ of 138, and Albert Speer 128.
      Speer was very bright, but not the smartest among the Nazis.

    • @jacobrabbinowitz
      @jacobrabbinowitz День назад

      nah

  • @astralclub5964
    @astralclub5964 2 года назад +198

    Years later, in his autobiography, Jesse Owens clarifies:
    “Hitler didn't snub me -it was FDR who snubbed me. the president didn't even send me a telegram.”

    • @evancoker194
      @evancoker194 2 года назад +15

      Couldn't be the America we know, could it ?

    • @GertrudePerkins
      @GertrudePerkins 2 года назад +16

      Sadly, you are right.

    • @rcrinsea
      @rcrinsea 2 года назад

      FDR also interned all persons of Japanese ancestry in concentration camps, destroying their lives.

    • @charlesvan13
      @charlesvan13 2 года назад

      He was a staunch Republican.
      The snubs were probably because the Democrats were very racist then. They reached out to him to campaign for the Democrats, but he supported the Republicans.
      I also read that in the NYC ticker tape parade some nameless person handed him a paper bag with $10,000 in it.
      That's equivalent to $200,000 today.

    • @codymays9943
      @codymays9943 2 года назад +7

      I did not know this. Wow

  • @stevenleslie8557
    @stevenleslie8557 Год назад +18

    I like when Speer's architect father saw his son's plan for Hitler's Germania, and how he told him he had lost his mind.

  • @coxmosia1
    @coxmosia1 2 года назад +59

    I recently discovered your channel and have fallen in love with it. Thank you for doing these profiles. Looking forward to watching many more.

  • @vivekthapa792
    @vivekthapa792 Год назад +6

    He definitely knew what was happening under the Nazi rule, he was an opportunist. He was lucky enough to escape the death penalty.

  • @2012MariCarmen
    @2012MariCarmen 2 года назад +46

    At the Nuremberg trials, Speer admitted culpability while denying any knowledge of the crime, but he did have knowledge of the extermination of the Jews. It is very clear in Gitta Sereny's book "Albert Speer: His Battle With The Truth"
    I think there are two main reasons why Speer lied about it:
    1) If he had admitted at the Nuremberg trials that he had knowledge of the "Final Solution", Speer would have been hanged.
    2) When the truth about ourselves is too hard to face it, the ego tends to use its Defense Mechanism to protect itself (denial, rationalization, rejection, repression, projection...)
    And, also, the human mind can live in a twilight between knowing and not knowing.
    In 1977, Speer finally admitted to the world and to himself that he knew it. Speer wrote: "However, to this day I still consider my main guilt to be my tacit acceptance of the persecution and murder of millions of Jews". ("Albert Speer: His Battle With The Truth" pag.707)

    • @jacksonreilly3441
      @jacksonreilly3441 2 года назад +4

      Realistically, what could Speer have done at that time? Could he have gone to Himmler and said, "Stop exterminating all those people Heinrich, you bad boy!" Somehow, I don't believe that would have ended well!

    • @jsv8898
      @jsv8898 Год назад +4

      @@jacksonreilly3441 no but he participated by being armament minister which helped prolong the war. He effectively served a genocidal regime. He also used forced labor which caused the deaths of thousands of people and was causing, surely to Speers knowledge, a lot of misery

    • @verysimlpesimon
      @verysimlpesimon 4 месяца назад +1

      Once it was safe to admit this of course

  • @mrlakkie1612
    @mrlakkie1612 Год назад +5

    About the black american who won the 4 medals on the olympics. He got more praise from hitler than he got back home. If hitler really was that furious about it, we wouldve known and not have to add in lines like "it was rumoured".

    • @blackyboi2885
      @blackyboi2885 Год назад +1

      maybe so. but lets be real here. if hitler ever prevailed and finally broke out of europe you know darn well what he would of done to owens and every black american or african...look how he felt about slavic people jews poles russians....there would be NO blacks left alive on the planet is what... maybe all south american indians also or any nonwhites everywwhere...except for maybe zoos

    • @jacksonreilly3441
      @jacksonreilly3441 Год назад

      @@blackyboi2885 Pure speculation. If my aunt had balls, she would be my uncle.

  • @AlbertSpeerPhd
    @AlbertSpeerPhd 2 года назад +153

    Well, its about time.

    • @AlbertSpeerPhd
      @AlbertSpeerPhd 2 года назад +13

      @maximus aurelius It is well engineered, made from Krupp steel.

    • @alexandercarder2281
      @alexandercarder2281 2 года назад +20

      Hi Mr Speer, what new architecture projects are you working on at the moment? 😊

    • @SamSebSii
      @SamSebSii 2 года назад +7

      DENTIST

    • @MALEMization
      @MALEMization 2 года назад +5

      SPEER, YAH!

    • @libertinemercenary8421
      @libertinemercenary8421 2 года назад +3

      You are my role model. The world is amoral. Morality, alongside religion are the bane of our species. The theory of Ruin Value is also amazing.

  • @vincentkosik403
    @vincentkosik403 2 года назад +67

    He was hurt because AH didn't thank him for all his efforts at their last visit in the Bunker...a true Bromance!

    • @vincentkosik403
      @vincentkosik403 2 года назад +8

      @@davidb2206 that's different from why Speer was emotionally hurt by Adolf spurring him off at their last meeting...from my sources AH at that point realized the game was up and it was through Speer s brilliant talent that enabled the military to keep them fighting several years by his management.
      At least Adolf could have said Good job old boy!
      PS Adolf was known to have exclaimed Heil Speer several times at him.
      Adolf got mad at him one time for letting an army group could abandon a Russian city because Germany had several years supply of a certain resource.
      Adolf chewed him out on that one but good.
      Read several great books on Speer...his son is also an architect and has worked in China..

    • @jijadelmais
      @jijadelmais 2 года назад +12

      I think the mere act of letting him go, says much about the appreciation AH had of him.

    • @philipppaasch8929
      @philipppaasch8929 Год назад

      Es ist "his" nicht "their", Hitler war offensichtlich schon da, es ist sein Bunker.

    • @ITILII
      @ITILII Год назад +2

      Speer deliberately disobeyed and worked against Hitler's scorched earth order to destroy German infrastructure. At their last meeting, Speer told Hitler that he disobeyed and worked against his orders - invariably the result of disobeying the Fuhrer's orders would be the death penalty. So even though Hitler no doubt was angered by one of his most faithful and closest followers at defying him, Hitler must also have felt their long years of such close association, and his great appreciation of Speer's talents as architect and minister of armaments, earned Speer a reprieve, Hitler's thanks to Speer was letting him live !

  • @ernestwilliams268
    @ernestwilliams268 2 года назад +87

    I was a guard at Spandau allied prison while serving as a soldier 6th infantry Berlin Command/ Brigade 1958-1962 4 years I served 60 days on that guard. at the time the three prisoners were Rudolf Hess-albert Speer-Baldur Von Schirach I saw them several times from guard tower #3-#4 They just looked like old men to me at the time. When you are young you never pay much attention to historic figures. I have looked down to Hitlers bunker there was a blown up air tower and a steps leading down in water.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад +7

      Fascinating!

    • @codymays9943
      @codymays9943 2 года назад +8

      This is very interesting, sir.

    • @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338
      @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338 2 года назад +2

      Was the guard tower your only post or did you also work inside the prison?

    • @ernestwilliams268
      @ernestwilliams268 2 года назад +1

      No we were not allowed to have anything to do with the prisoners they had German handlers taking care of them we only guarded the prison premature and the front gate each allied nation took over the guard every 30 days American, British, French, Russian we relieved the Russians the British relieved us and the French relieved the British then the Russians relieved them it required 31 guards at night we had two roving patrol on the outside of the prison walking complete around outside of the wire there was a 20 foot chain link fence then inside of it was an electric fence then the 20 foot brick wall with towers. Each allied nation had their own wardens when they took over, they were Army colonels. I spent 60 days in my 4 years in Berlin on that guard duty. @@cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338

    • @sanchoodell6789
      @sanchoodell6789 Год назад

      Indeed lets hope for a Hitler body recovery service and a huge mausoleum and state funeral!

  • @2009pepepanama
    @2009pepepanama 2 года назад +110

    Great documentary, well researched. One thing, another reason for him to try to “rehabilitate” his image, the relationship with his kids, but apparently it was all for none as they did not buy his claims….. Good for them, I can only imagine how difficult it is to be related to him

    • @unclebill1202
      @unclebill1202 2 года назад +1

      Speer even did the dirty on the wife who had waited and helped him during those 20 years in Spandau. He was reported as having a sexual affair with another woman when he died in London.

    • @johntechwriter
      @johntechwriter Год назад

      That his own children did not buy in to Speer’s con job says everything I need to know.

    • @archangelliii2536
      @archangelliii2536 Год назад

      True but remember, the kids of other Nazi criminals such as the daughter of Göring, became almost neo Nazis and most certainly antisemites as adults so the fact Speer's children went the opposite direction might confirm that he was not a die hard antisemite as the other high ranking Nazis. Parents have a huge influence on their Children.

    • @SoFarSoGoodSoWhat14
      @SoFarSoGoodSoWhat14 Год назад

      And props to his daughter for standing up for Jewish people, that's called praxis

    • @nightshadegatito
      @nightshadegatito Год назад +2

      I guess a good architect isn’t always also a good leader

  • @RedBlushGurl
    @RedBlushGurl Год назад +7

    I have a hard time believing he used slave labour and didn’t have any idea what was happening to them. I call BS

  • @yourgirlme9163
    @yourgirlme9163 2 года назад +40

    the man who feigned remorse

    • @shawnkennedy855
      @shawnkennedy855 2 года назад +8

      Bingo

    • @freyasslain2203
      @freyasslain2203 2 года назад +8

      Youre damned right . That monster should have been strung up. Lying S.O.B.

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini 2 года назад +3

      What little I read on in his later life. I would not be surprised he goose step his way to the grave. But he appear outsmarted some Allies that counted to saved his self & some of them Allies it was easy thing to do.

    • @edgaraquino2324
      @edgaraquino2324 Год назад +1

      Yup!

  • @Stephen-wb3wf
    @Stephen-wb3wf 2 года назад +24

    Facinating life and individual.

  • @longshanks5531
    @longshanks5531 Год назад +12

    Speer had a brilliant mind

  • @kbunky69
    @kbunky69 2 года назад +81

    Must admit his plans for a new German Capital looks very impressive if it could have been build outside of issues .

    • @three33three33
      @three33three33 2 года назад +12

      All of these were possible if Germany didn't attack poland and should've let the rising economy do its job.
      And as a Junior Architect, yeah I agree, the Volkshalle would have been a monumental masterpiece. Imagine standing infront of that building witnessing it's sheer size.

    • @Athrun82
      @Athrun82 2 года назад +5

      @@three33three33 Have you ever seen the Amazon series "The man in the high castle"? In season 2 they have a scene in the Volkshalle (what the directors thought the Volkshalle would look from the inside) and it is an amazing and chilling scene.

    • @extremedrumming3393
      @extremedrumming3393 2 года назад +12

      It's horrible city planning. The whole city is meant for show, not comfortable living

    • @malcolmledger176
      @malcolmledger176 2 года назад +11

      Megalomaniac, inhuman architecture, which dwarfs and tried to render insignificant the human individual. Typical of the Third Reich`s "values". It would have been an architectural outrage.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад +3

      When one has unlimited slave labor at one’s disposal (disposal being the accurate word here) then one can design grandiose buildings.

  • @Tje760
    @Tje760 Год назад +7

    Albert Speer wanted to be remembered for his architectural legacy. He was very well aware about the Holocaust and the inhuman conditions but his ambition to leave his creative legacy overshadowed his conscience. But the point is he never showed any remorse in any form. The 2 volumes he wrote were meant to rectify his tarnished image rather than shedding any light on the Genocide. He surely knew countless secrets about the working of concentration camps especially the slave labourers. But no reference at all in his books. I think this is a man so obsessed with himself that he can turn a blind eye to all the bloodshed that is happening around him. In the end most of the buildings he designed were reduced to rubble and his projects were never realised.

  • @theavandenberg6876
    @theavandenberg6876 2 года назад +66

    I always find him one of the most interesting figures around Hitler. I think he was very clever which saved him from the gallows. But I don't doubt for a second he knew everything which was going on including the concentration-camps.

    • @TERRANOVAofficial
      @TERRANOVAofficial 2 года назад +9

      he didnt just know but was responsible for the deaths of thousands of slavelabourers from the concentrationcamps that he ordered for his armsfactories. he was a chronic liar and toured talkshows aroind the world -very popular in england

    • @theavandenberg6876
      @theavandenberg6876 2 года назад +3

      @@TERRANOVAofficial which makes it mystifying why not only he wasn't executed, but he was actually released after serving his term.

    • @edgaraquino2324
      @edgaraquino2324 Год назад +5

      @@theavandenberg6876 That's because only after he had been released that evidence had begun to appear that showed his guilt...including a photograph which showed him in a cc when he always said he had never been in one...if this new evidence was available at trial, he would have been executed...he fooled a lot of people...

    • @mattosullivan9687
      @mattosullivan9687 Год назад

      Back in the 70s Speer was portrayed as the "good" Nazi who was sorry for what happened. Fact was he was the ultimate slavemaster as Minister of Armorments should have been executed

    • @jjcalelaid-back
      @jjcalelaid-back Год назад +1

      He suggested to let them work instead of the ovens

  • @steffenritter7497
    @steffenritter7497 2 года назад +32

    After the war and his imprisonment ended, he became quite familiar with .... and to a certain extent, popular ... in the West, and in the United States. I remember seeing him on television, which prompted me to buy his book, "Inside the Third Reich". I also became somewhat of a Speer "fan", thinking him different than the coarser Nazis in the regime. Although I still have his book - I never throw away books - he served an incredibly vicious regime. As an intellectual, he should have known the nature of that regime. But he embraced it. Live and learn ...

    • @missnevenka
      @missnevenka 2 года назад +7

      Speer came across well, making it easy to fall into his pit of manipulation. Admittedly, I found myself being suckered by him. I don’t know if Speer was a hateful antisemite or not, but he obviously had no qualms in profiting from the Jews’ persecution.

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 2 года назад +3

      Read his book too

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 2 года назад +3

      @@gumby2241 u should go seek help for your cognitive dissonance

    • @steffenritter7497
      @steffenritter7497 2 года назад +3

      @@gumby2241 Who are you talking to, here? If it's to me, absolutely no one with whom I am acquainted would accuse me of supporting the Biden regime.

  • @malcolmledger176
    @malcolmledger176 2 года назад +9

    From 17:00 onwards you talk about Hitler`s plans for a new Berlin, which was to be built on an "East-West" axis. In his book, "Hitler", the historian Voker Ullrich has this to say, quoting from Goebbles` diary entry for Dec. 1936 "A marvellous arrangement. Very large and monumental. Calculated for twenty years. With a gigantic street from south to north." (p.602). On page 607 there is this: "And in fact the `gigantomania` of these plans exceeded everything previously built in history. The North-South axis, intended as the jewel of the new Berlin..." Later, on page 605, "The space occupied by the train tracks between Potsdam and Anhalt train stations did not suffice to build the North-South Axis." Perhaps you might like to clarify this discrepancy.

  • @herbertvonsauerkrautunterh2513
    @herbertvonsauerkrautunterh2513 2 года назад +7

    My family is from Mannheim.. 👍👍👍 great small city.. Heidelberg is just up the Neckar..
    Omg I need to go there again..

  • @isanynameavailable6
    @isanynameavailable6 2 года назад +5

    Thanks for the upload, you do great work

  • @uhlijohn
    @uhlijohn Год назад +4

    I think it was known as Organization Todt....not Operation Todt. I read Speer's memoir in high school, Inside The Third Reich, around 1970 or 1971.

  • @rolandkeyner9031
    @rolandkeyner9031 Год назад +4

    He accepted his 20 yr. sentence without an appeal. I wonder if he thought that was his due penance for knowingly contributing to the final solution. If he truly believed he was innocent, he would have fought harder for his freedom. I think he realized how lucky he was to escape the hangman's noose.

    • @marionthompson3365
      @marionthompson3365 Год назад +3

      Without a doubt. I can still see his face when he heard his verdict. His cheeks puffed in a motion of surprise and relief.

  • @deee5520
    @deee5520 2 года назад +16

    Does this sound familiar? At about 7 minutes into the video. History repeating itself today.
    I always hate it when people say, OH THAT CANT HAPPEN TODAY. 😡

  • @tai-yomaruno3680
    @tai-yomaruno3680 2 года назад +21

    Great video my friend!!

  • @SammyNeedsAnAlibi
    @SammyNeedsAnAlibi 11 месяцев назад +2

    He was like just about all the other Nazis, an unabashed opportunist and morally bankrupt.....

  • @JBrodo
    @JBrodo Год назад +5

    "I didn't know actual party policy, I just joined because the angry, simplistic, rac1st man was inspiring to me!" Ok, Speer.

  • @kerryevans7283
    @kerryevans7283 2 года назад +6

    Love your channel. I have just introduced my friends 13year old to your channel.

    • @firdoshvirjee3592
      @firdoshvirjee3592 4 месяца назад

      I was very impressed by your Video, thank you so much please make a video about his family when he was imprisoned especially his wife and children.

  • @ronjon7942
    @ronjon7942 2 года назад +5

    I don’t know enough to have an opinion either way, but there’s something about the man that always made him…digestable? to me, almost like I want him to be less complicit. I’ve always wondered if the Allies wanted and needed an example of a high ranking Nazi who could be rehabilitated, and Speer slipped into the role. I think ‘we’ needed examples of monsters, too - plenty of those.

  • @jerryspeer7924
    @jerryspeer7924 2 года назад +6

    My family rarely speaks of him.

    • @proud2bpagan
      @proud2bpagan Год назад +2

      Having him in your bloodline must be a really hard cross to bear. i've heard that the Hitler family have changed their last name so there's no guilt by family association.

  • @viniciogomescompositor
    @viniciogomescompositor 2 года назад +9

    Eu li sua biografia de capa a capa e em nenhum momento acreditei em sua inocência. Ele era claramente um sedutor, talvez o aspecto de sua personalidade que mais se assemelhava a Hitler. Também sempre tive a impressão de que ele quis construir uma imagem icônica do "alemão inocente" com a qual toda a sociedade alemã pudesse se identificar. Foi sua forma de continuar sendo um nacionalista. Bem, é só uma impressão, uma mera opinião leiga.

  • @luciangherase
    @luciangherase Год назад +3

    Aside from his moral faults, Speer has done 2 things that others on trial didn't: admiting collective reponsiblity and standing up to Hitler.
    Whitney Robson Harris, prosecutor from the Nuremberg trials: "When he finally, toward the end (of the war), had the courage to refuse to execute the orders of the Fuhrer, in respect to Scorched Earth policy, that was a demonstration of the triumph of his intellect over his emotional attachment and I don't think that his refusal to carry out Hitler's orders in the end was a matter of defiance or that he thought at that time as a defensive with respect to his own complicity in this conspiracy. I think that Albert Speer just realized that this is not the right thing to do and I give him that credit and I think that's why the Tribunal ultimately decided not to give him the death sentence..."
    Also, on why Sauckel received the death penalty but not Speer: "Each shared responsibity for this terrrible crime (slave labour program) but the carrying out of the crime was Sauckel responsibility and the way it was carried out was so bad that Sauckel had to pay with his life".

  • @blackyboi2885
    @blackyboi2885 Год назад +12

    worth noting that speer could not fool his children

  • @joshuajohnson8265
    @joshuajohnson8265 Год назад +1

    Well minus the inaccuracy in Goerings documentary and Bormanns I love these videos!!!

  • @dyerex54
    @dyerex54 2 года назад +24

    Speer manipulated the court at Nuremberg. Robert Jackson really didn’t go after him that hard. Also Speer accepted responsibility for the war which none of the other defendants at Nuremberg would. He influenced Gilbert the prison psychologist to separate Goering from the rest of the defendant’s at lunch to reduce Goering’s influence

    • @dyerex54
      @dyerex54 2 года назад +3

      On them

    • @divyeshpatel147
      @divyeshpatel147 2 года назад +1

      It's not quite simple , it's all about cold war , allied saved him for secret military installations and using his talent , also he kept in western German which was under allied occupation, Russians wanted him to be hanged , allied saved him before Nuremberg trial there was private group who capture him and gave deal , concept was to find out how he saves his war factory during massive bombing so they can count on war against Japan but it was all lie doesn't makes any sense, reality was to save him and use his knowledge

    • @popovlerusse1443
      @popovlerusse1443 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@divyeshpatel147Yeah I read about that. Also the allies wanted Speer alive to get more details about his organisation skills.

  • @robertjames7982
    @robertjames7982 2 года назад +9

    Speer was an opportunist ... just a man like any other who took advantage of his position at the time.

  • @nicolelabram5575
    @nicolelabram5575 2 года назад +15

    I always saw him as sinister. Sort of a Dr. Menghele with a T square.

    • @PyrrhusBrin
      @PyrrhusBrin 2 года назад +4

      I don't think sinister describes him. Cold, calculating, clever and at the same time easily influenced.

  • @alankillian4962
    @alankillian4962 2 года назад +17

    I know many besides myself have many questions regarding just how so many of those owners of native German industry escaped responsibility for the use and exploitation of slave labor. Probably no better starting point than the Krupp armament industrial empire.

    • @evancoker194
      @evancoker194 2 года назад +6

      For the same reason Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach was released early from his War Crimes sentence. It very much matters who you are in this world.

    • @newshound2521
      @newshound2521 Год назад

      If they could be of use to the allies they were let off.

  • @jeffmutrie227
    @jeffmutrie227 2 года назад +36

    This is a great video. It's too bad most of the works have been destroyed!

  • @ronron493
    @ronron493 2 года назад +41

    I have a question. Who narrates your videos? And BTW your videos are amazing. Getting all the information on every person you do has to be hard work. All the reading and watching videos on people an make a video about it amazes me. Salute to you my friend.

    • @Smithington_
      @Smithington_ 2 года назад +2

      ruclips.net/video/8DC4VQUfSXw/видео.html
      "Narrated by Rob Jones"

    • @firdoshvirjee3592
      @firdoshvirjee3592 Год назад

      Exactly l agree with you

    • @taranullius9221
      @taranullius9221 Год назад +6

      They license other people's documentaries (BBC, ITV, Channel 4, PBS probably etc) and then just make their own thumbnails and change the title.

    • @philipppaasch8929
      @philipppaasch8929 Год назад

      Man muss den Nationalsozialismus einfach lieben, na klar, was 'ne Frage.

  • @billscannell93
    @billscannell93 2 года назад +12

    "Work makes you free." Well, that is definitely sarcastic and evil... Just the fact they put that up drives home that they not only knew what they were doing was wrong, but reveled in it.

    • @maxdecphoenix
      @maxdecphoenix 2 года назад +4

      that signage was more for the cameras and visitors, than the inmates. The reich tried desperatly to keep people away from these camps, or even talk about the camps to the extent possible, but at the same time they had to convince the greater population that these were 'labor' camps. One of the ways they camoflauged the purpose of these camps was to make them look like a labor camp.

    • @ahappyimago
      @ahappyimago 2 года назад +2

      It’s ironic because the sneakiness and evil and even the drive for world domination the Nazis accused the Jews of having were in fact their own traits. Truly a bunch of thugs and cowards that are directly responsible for the death of tens of millions

  • @rosacasas1703
    @rosacasas1703 2 года назад +4

    It wasn't just the use of slave labor... In order to rebuild Berlin as Speer wanted, it was necessary to relocate thousands of germans whose houses had to be demolished. And where were all those germans going to be relocated? In the houses of the jews, who for this reason began to be deported. And Speer was directly responsible for these deportations because it was his competence as Inspector General of the buildings of the Reich capital... Sadly, he only cared about building, no matter who he had to step on.

  • @mariellen8346
    @mariellen8346 2 года назад +15

    Excellent vid as usual!! I love your content 😊

  • @Peteripattaya
    @Peteripattaya 2 года назад +14

    In the society we live in now, I think I can point out several people who would act like him.

    • @BigAl53750
      @BigAl53750 Год назад

      I can point out several government leaders who act like his boss!
      The problem is that people can become enslaved by the idea put forward by Vladimir Lenin; “The ends justify the means.”
      I can name several people today who have this exact same idea and are not shy about putting this vile ideology into their own words.
      Jacinda Adern is one that comes to mind, with her response to a reporter’s statement that her actions ‘seemed’ to be erecting two classes of people.
      Her appalling response was;
      “That is exactly what it is.”
      Justin Trudeau is another who infamously stated that he admired the Chinese Communist dictatorship (his exact words!) for their ability to create an economic revitalisation of their nation.
      Such utterances are not even a little bit different from the ideology of the Nazis, yet these people are allowed to continue to hold office, when the generation of people who fought the Nazis and their hideous regime are expected to just accept such horribly treacherous betrayal of their collective sacrifices.
      The sad fact is that most such dreadful regimes are only able to exist with the tacit collaboration of ordinary people, who agree with their leaders, in an obvious means of surviving a pretty horrible reality.
      We all would like to believe that WE would never go along with such horrors as the extermination camps, etc, but recent events have shown that everyday people are only too ready to comply with outrageous human rights violations, in ways that are quite shocking to most of us.
      I have watched Police officers commit acts such as running down a mentally unstable man with a patrol car, then stomping on his head, leaving him in a serious coma, something I NEVER would have believed possible.
      I’ve also witnessed a massed group of Police officers firing rubber bullets at the BACKS of people who were peacefully demonstrating against the trampling of their basic human rights. These and other abuses leave me with no doubt whatsoever that these people would do whatever they were ordered to do and then later make their excuse the same one put forth by defendants at Nuremberg; “I was just obeying orders.”
      It’s easy to SAY that we wouldn’t do this or that, but it’s a very different story when you have such a decision forced upon you at a moment’s notice.
      The fact is that in MOST cases, people are in fact prepared to just obey whatever orders they are given, which means that for all our protestations to the contrary, we are not so much better than the people under Nazi rule as we like to think.
      The pressure of the mob is a powerful goad and not as easy to ignore as many people suppose.
      We fear being the odd one out and if enough people have the same fear, not realising how many others may feel the same and believe that they are the only ones who do, then the result will be complicity.
      It was ever thus.

  • @dannybeun948
    @dannybeun948 2 года назад +5

    Great documentary like always he was on the perfect time & place at our opinion 👌

  • @oleriis-vestergaard6844
    @oleriis-vestergaard6844 2 года назад +9

    Albert , the man that talked him self out of the hang-mans nose -- and that he years later wanted to sell some ekspensive pictures that formerly had been owned by some jewish familyes but then in 70 ties was no where to be found - strange

    • @S_MannMann
      @S_MannMann 2 года назад +1

      The most culpable Nazi! A man whose education and background provided him the moral and ethical background to oppose the Nazis - instead he chose to be a criminal! Of all the War Crimes Defendants, his offenses were the most flagrant! His continued (post War) black-market business - selling art work stolen from Jewish his victims further shows that he had no remorse for his crimes. Of all the Nazis, he most richly deserved hanging.

  • @Nobodyman6979
    @Nobodyman6979 2 года назад +6

    Best narrator in the business.

  • @billscannell93
    @billscannell93 2 года назад +21

    They were all about symbols, and Speer's idea that the eagle gripping the swastika would eventually be replaced by the eagle gripping a globe speaks pretty clearly to me... They never would have stopped, until their nutty leader's evil project was implemented around the world.

  • @steve0the0end
    @steve0the0end 2 года назад +1

    this narrators voice is so soothing.

  • @laucaminhaaguiar6925
    @laucaminhaaguiar6925 Год назад +2

    Excellent documentary!!!!! Congratulations!!!!

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx7706 2 года назад +15

    I have read Spandau, which I have also read described as “Speer’s apologia”. It’s obviously a cover his ass work. I always believed he knew more than he admitted. The death rates due to starvation, disease, ill treatment at the factories, etc. that he oversaw was too high for him not to have observed their conditions during his inspection visits to the sites where they were “working”. He also kept having to ask for replacement labor from the camps, which indicates he knew life expectancy of the workers was short. He said he was sorry many times, but never what for. He claims being almost hypnotized by the force of Hitler’s personality. He was a guy on the make, who cared for no one but himself. I’m sorry he died before having to face the truth of his duplicity being revealed.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад

      @@DBEdwards well, he was in a way, marrying Carin, who was rich, but I believe he truly loved her. As for his position as a top Nazi, he earned that originally due to his stellar record as a WWI ace, then continued because of his grievous wounds sustained in the 1923 putsch. Once in power he definitely became a braggart and stole every treasure not nailed down (and some which were) for his personal home decorations. Speer had little history and was more corrupted than many, and justified himself more than many. Read Spandau, I have.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад +1

      @@DBEdwards How about using slave labor knowing how they were sick and starved and mistreated? How about visiting the concentration camps and lying about it? How about claiming he was mesmerized into following Hitler and felt his Will subjugated to hitler’s until he didn’t realize what he was doing? Read Spandau. I have. Excuse after excuse, cause he knew he’d get out someday. How about his kids refusing to socialize with him? They knew the truth. He’s long dead and rotting and everyone knows the truth he hid in life. Defend him all you want. The truth is out and you can’t change that.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад +1

      @@DBEdwards you needn’t shout. No one is listening to you emotional rants, not even his children.

    • @edlawn5481
      @edlawn5481 Год назад

      They knew he was as guilty as the others, but I think they wanted to spare one figure from Hitler's inner circle so they could have someone who could be interviewed and talk about The Third Reich from first-hand experience.

    • @michaeltowslee4111
      @michaeltowslee4111 4 месяца назад

      Subsequent research has shown that Speer was more knowledgeable than he ever admitted.

  • @marvinbrando722
    @marvinbrando722 2 года назад +7

    Speer, smart guy

  • @lajkme7649
    @lajkme7649 2 года назад +15

    Rudolf Hoess video would be a great idea
    Or a deep profile of Hitler.
    Thank you for your great and huge awesome work.
    You are great guys 😊

  • @99attftw1
    @99attftw1 3 месяца назад

    Slight technical error, lads: Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa built the Pantheon. His name is literally on the archway in the video @18:48.

  • @woodenseagull1899
    @woodenseagull1899 2 года назад +4

    His " lack of knowledge "...of not knowing about thousands of Slaves, being worked to death in the war factory's.whilst head of Armerments..!
    Such a background, he got off very, very lightly...

  • @DrRelientD
    @DrRelientD Год назад +1

    My grandmother was among the slave labor who worked in factories. When she was 6 years old her and her mother were taken from Ukraine and ended up in Nuremburg making grenandes.

  • @tnecklover
    @tnecklover 2 года назад +20

    Fascinating! An amoral man...should never have been allowed out!

  • @stephanbach1652
    @stephanbach1652 Год назад +4

    Speer used even Hitler to build what he wanted. Then he used what he built as an excuse for what ‘they’ had done. However I’m glad he lived to present his tainted view of that era. We know a great deal more because of his books and speeches. He lost his children as the ultimate punishment.

    • @firdoshvirjee3592
      @firdoshvirjee3592 4 месяца назад

      If he divorced his wife who faithfully waited for him,do you think the spin less man like Speer cared about his children. He was z womanizer

  • @thomasbyg4795
    @thomasbyg4795 Год назад

    Very well done in all creative aspects. Thanks

  • @extremedrumming3393
    @extremedrumming3393 2 года назад +8

    One of the more interesting Nazis.

  • @trj1442
    @trj1442 2 года назад +11

    One of your best episodes. Have you ever thought of covering explorers?

  • @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath
    @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath Год назад +3

    “He is rumored to have remarked” LOL

  • @LeePenn2492
    @LeePenn2492 2 года назад +3

    Interesting and informative very good

  • @joels5150
    @joels5150 Год назад +2

    Wouldn’t believe for a second that Speer was unaware of the atrocities committed while he was a Nazi.

  • @darilensaharithariffin
    @darilensaharithariffin 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for this documentary

  • @michaell2254
    @michaell2254 2 года назад +18

    Interesting take on Speer. I have read his memoirs extensively, plus the books by others such as gritta sireny who wrote about him extensively after doing very extensive interviews with him after the war. My take on all this is that l have no doubt he was extensively involved with the nazis in his youth, and probably turned a blind eye to their barbarity (he wouldn’t be the first person to do that sort of thing in order to protect his prestigious and powerful position especially for one so young), even though he may not have realised the extent of the barbarity at the beginning. What was he supposed to do, come out and campaign against Hitler, to do so would have amounted to personal suicide. Sereny also speculated he may have had some peripheral part in the July ‘44 plot to kill Hitler. There is definite evidence that he planned to kill him in his bunker at the end of the war, but this ironically was foiled by building repair to the bunker. His extensive writings post war are full of agonising self-reflection and regret that he did not do more once he had a full understanding of nazi atrocities post war. The complexity of this situation, and his subsequent agonising about it is what makes the Speer story so fascinating for so many people. I am personally glad that such a sophisticated insider survived the war and was prepared to shed light on past events as an insider, even though retrospectively this may seem like a dodgy moral compass. Michael L (mikes2014.com)

    • @shauntaylor2850
      @shauntaylor2850 2 года назад

      Totally agree. Very clever and self serving

    • @niceguy8756
      @niceguy8756 2 года назад +7

      His 3rd choice could have been to not seek and turn down any opportunity to join the Nazi administration, i.e. to be on the side lines. Because he didn't do that, and because he was aware of the atrocities, and because he was at a senior level, he shares the guilt and deserved the highest punnishment.

  • @ASLUHLUHC3
    @ASLUHLUHC3 Год назад +1

    It's interesting just how vintage the dreams of only the last century appear to us now

  • @ardeladimwit
    @ardeladimwit Год назад +2

    Speer was a great propagandist and he used architecture as propaganda for the Nazi regime, but Speer was never as much for Nazi regime as he was for self promotion and advancement regardless of the price. He presents himself as some kind of idealist who is victim to an evil regime, but actually he was the idealist promoting the evil regime and not the victim at all. He lived a rather charmed life if you consider the amount of slave labor fed into his factories and slave camps and number of social or political undesirables executed or sent to death camps... despicable. Doubtful that many historians actually seriously promoted his memoirs as accurate as even to common reader they stink like rotting fish. Speer is something of a Ted Bundy put in a gov administrative position where he can satisfy his own rather voracious personal demands.

  • @gerryyaum
    @gerryyaum Год назад +2

    He seems at least early on to have been driven by personal glory and the drive to create his buildings while being indifferent to the terrible human costs. A man corrupted who did not mind being so. Later regretting and trying to cover up his ugliness. So many in Germany of that time chose first themselves over the welfare of others.

  • @DarthMeteos
    @DarthMeteos 2 года назад +8

    I remember watching his interviews during the documentary The World at War and being struck by how likeable he was. Even now I have a soft spot for Speer because his tastes and way of speaking were similar to my own.
    Of course, this is a purely personal thing, his political affiliations were diametrically opposed to mine. But he seemed a pleasant bloke to have a conversation with about the arts and creativity.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад +4

      He worked that to his advantage during the trial.

    • @DarthMeteos
      @DarthMeteos 2 года назад +2

      @@loditx7706 I'm sure, though I don't know how much it helped. Nuremberg was weird in that, apart from Hess, who looked like a piece of drywall with all the charisma that affords, they seemed in good spirits for much of it. Göring had a big personality.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад

      @@DarthMeteos he got deflated as the evidence piled up against him. And his personality was false pride. He wanted execution by firing squad “as befits a soldier”. Fool, he never understood. In WWII he wasn’t a soldier, he was a criminal. In prison in Nuremberg he was forced to go “cold turkey” (never understood origin of that term) off his morphine and other drugs and was put on a 1000 calorie a day diet. Improving his condition gave him the ability to posture and argue and dominate the weaker defendants. I’m with the Russians at that time. Line them all up and shoot them. Let god sort them out.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 2 года назад +3

      @@DarthMeteos Hess never looked good. As Angela Lansbury said in The Company of Wolves, “Never trust a man with one eyebrow.”

  • @lisaschuster686
    @lisaschuster686 Год назад +2

    He did order a great increase in food for his laborers.

    • @DanLetts97
      @DanLetts97 Год назад

      Only because they were too weak to work

  • @terrymeadows1827
    @terrymeadows1827 Год назад

    I had no idea how close to Speer's account was the excellent 1982 television mini-series "Inside the Third Reich". Thank you.

  • @JeffSmith-pl2pj
    @JeffSmith-pl2pj Год назад +3

    I think cultured is the key. It is hard to believe a man who is so educated and talented and who came from a wealthy family could have done such terrible things. I believe he spoke fluent English also. People are often judged by their appearance.

  • @ileanaacacostaacosta1813
    @ileanaacacostaacosta1813 2 года назад +5

    He certainly was not oblivious but at the beginning he may have been it can't be denied that he was too young only 25 it's not like 18 or 20 but head a very young enough to be deceived and awed enough Tessenow his professor warned him against the Nazis urged him to get away from them As an older and wise man in the ways of the world he saw through them but Speer did not listen to him Years later this gentleman was a witness of character in his favor during his trial at Nuremberg Even Albert's father himself told that Hitler and his Nazis were mad because being an architect himself found their way of building strange and crazy So Speer had a lot of warning but did not listen and look what became of him a Nazi war criminal as despised and disreputable figure

  • @JoshEmerson0421
    @JoshEmerson0421 Год назад +2

    One of the first real books I ever read was his autobiography when I was a teenager

    • @slendus8363
      @slendus8363 Год назад

      currently reading that right now

  • @luciangagliola
    @luciangagliola Год назад +8

    I follow "the banality of evil" model. Speer, like many others, was ambitious and talented at his work. This got him noticed and promoted. He did join the upper echelons after Hitler, Goring, Goebbels, and Himler, but was likely due to personal ambition and moral cowardice indifferent toward or at least excusing of what he knew was happening.
    I think Speer, however, may have come to believe his own lies, or felt that because the Holocaust was already happening it was not his place to stop it and simply participated with a sort of callous and professional indifference, much like Adolf Eichmann, a man who was more motivated to perform effectively and do a good job than taking interest in what that really meant for so many others.
    Speer did some awful things, but the efforts he went through to rehabilitate his image and his comprehensive memoir, were unique and interesting and make us question who he really was. Was his goal to lie to us, or did he lie to himself first? That is an answer we will never know. To what extent it is important is debatable. What he did, he did. As the Bible says, you will know them by their fruits.

    • @dextermane3126
      @dextermane3126 Год назад +1

      I think you make a very valid point and probably is the real truth

    • @DavidRafaelSutton
      @DavidRafaelSutton 3 месяца назад

      Was all due respect you don't seem to have any grasp or knowledge of Nazism what went on in Germany or any of this the first of all spear did not join while this was already going on he joined the Nazi party in the early thirties there wasn't even there was no Holocaust back in the thirties or even the very early forties not the way you know the mass the mass production of plan on doing that who joined the party early early on and he might have not gotten into the power position that he had until the 40s you know the early 40s but to say that he joined well this was all going on and stuff already is not accurate at all who cares if you lie to himself before he lied to others to the world does an excuse anything nor does it ameliorate these anything that he did as a result of his being in Hitler's in a circle Elvis fear was nothing less than a war crimes crimes against humanity humanities Nazi piece of garbage that should have been hung up along with the others he got to live three and a half decades or so after world war II and it with his victims never had that chance nor do they have the chance of any kind of dignity at all if unless this dignity and suffering Sicily Bob the blind bedroom guitarist

  • @NickWard-f6l
    @NickWard-f6l Месяц назад

    Unbelievable he was one of the talking heads on the Epic tv series The World at War 😮

  • @futurefreak8789
    @futurefreak8789 2 года назад +4

    He’s guilty they allwere

  • @alexlents4689
    @alexlents4689 5 месяцев назад +2

    I’ll give him a sliver of credit; it’s pretty impressive what major projects he got at such a young age by architect standards. Most architects don’t start getting projects of the scale he did until they’re in their 40’s. Speer was *29* when he became chief architect of the entire regime. He was a monster, but he was very talented. Kind of a shame he decided to use it for such an evil cause.

  • @donaldcrawfordiii554
    @donaldcrawfordiii554 2 года назад +13

    I think Speer as where many Germans, was a man of his time. This does not excuse his actions though. He got was coming to him in the end; 20 years.

    • @diegomorata2885
      @diegomorata2885 2 года назад +1

      We all will get what's coming to us. At least he fought on the right side of history

    • @kenmcdaniel6913
      @kenmcdaniel6913 2 года назад +2

      A man of his time??? If he had truly gotten what was coming to him, he would've been hanged. He was totally complicit!!!!!

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 2 года назад

      @@kenmcdaniel6913 EXACTLY

    • @ЮлияИзварина-ш1ъ
      @ЮлияИзварина-ш1ъ 2 года назад +1

      Nazi Regime itself is a product of its time

  • @danielarevalo6222
    @danielarevalo6222 2 года назад +5

    Question: what Von Ribbentrop crimes made the death sentence appropriate?

    • @evancoker194
      @evancoker194 2 года назад +3

      Helping with the subterfuge of true Nazi aims of brutal conquest, and helping lay the groundwork and planning of an aggressive war. A wolf in wolfs' clothing. People trusted him, and millions upon millions died.

  • @destubae3271
    @destubae3271 2 года назад +5

    Speer, ja!

  • @richardstevens8479
    @richardstevens8479 Год назад +4

    Speer knew exactly what was going on and I've never thought otherwise.

    • @MikeS309
      @MikeS309 Год назад

      he probably knew what was going on, but like many nazis, probably just saw himself as a cog in the machine, unable to change anything. Instead he chose to advance himself and use what was going on to his and his family's advantage.

  • @cadenyrkoski7093
    @cadenyrkoski7093 2 года назад +1

    Love your videos fellas keep going off

  • @mc152938
    @mc152938 Год назад +3

    I watched till 10:58 min, and stopped, everything is distorted...by the way, when are you going to teach us about the communists' and the japanese army's atrocities who far surpassed that of the Nazis' ??????, the answer is, NEVER...

  • @fdungan
    @fdungan 2 года назад +2

    Love the Pantheon in Germania.

  • @clarkhull7546
    @clarkhull7546 2 года назад +3

    Hitler met with Speer in the mornings? I always read that Hitler would sleep in til the crack of noon.

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini 2 года назад +2

      What I read same thing unless mornings for Hitler was 1 am. Then his afternoon nap was at 4:00 am to 12:00pm..

    • @noldo3837
      @noldo3837 2 года назад +1

      I definitelly dont like communism, Stalin or Russians, but - there is a contrast - Hitler was dreamer, artist, never worked, never cared of details, slept till noon, thinking of next centuries... Stalin woke at 6 or 7, read piles of documents on his own, wore workers outfit, actually listened to his advisors and generals and was pragmatist to the bone and realist.

    • @jacksonreilly3441
      @jacksonreilly3441 2 года назад

      @@noldo3837 In his youth, Stalin never held a job but robbed banks for a living. None of the commie bastards including Marx himself were very fond of working. They preferred to steal both before and after seizing illegitimate power.

  • @dreamingflurry2729
    @dreamingflurry2729 Год назад +1

    Calling such a house "upper middle class" is a slap in the face for most people! I am sorry, but a house like that (so a mansion!) is upper class! It's a house most people will never be able to afford and if most people are supposed to be middle class then such houses are out of reach for them!

  • @danieldalai8452
    @danieldalai8452 4 месяца назад

    I visited speer at his house in the heidelberg hills. He and his wife were very cordial. Like Rommel, Dönitz, and others, he was not a Nazi. He was serving just as US soldiers served in killing Iraquis.

  • @katherinecollins4685
    @katherinecollins4685 2 года назад +1

    Well presented