Blitz (2024) Official Trailer | Saoirse Ronan- Trailer Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 10

  • @1990pommie
    @1990pommie 2 месяца назад

    AS A REAL BLITZ SURVIVOR ITS A TOTA LY POLITICALY CORRECT NONESENCE

  • @johndockrell7849
    @johndockrell7849 4 месяца назад +6

    1941 London was a very white place. Interracial marriage was unheard of at that time. The image shown here is another DEI vision of what never was.

    • @jamesmurphy1389
      @jamesmurphy1389 4 месяца назад

      Totally. Will be avoiding like the plague. I will not have my people erased from their own history for the sake of leftist ideology.

    • @markharvey9393
      @markharvey9393 4 месяца назад

      Man, I hope you're a bot. No person should allow themselves to be that ignorant.

    • @Loulizabeth
      @Loulizabeth 2 месяца назад

      That's not entirely true. John Richard Archer became the first black mayor within London from November 1913 to November 1914. Also if you want to see how many in Britain viewed blacks during the war all you have to do is research the battle of Bamber Bridge June 1943. Black Americans soldiers who had come over as part of the war effort from the US were well received, on the whole in the UK. It was the White Americans who were unhappy about the British refusal to enforce racial segregation in public places that caused the main problems. And in an article in the Guardian newspaper named "Mixed Race Britain - Charting The Social History" It states that during the 1920's, 1930's and the 1940's interracial relationships, were common place in places like London especially around the Docklands and in places like Liverpool as well. And these are both areas that were heavily affected by the Blitz as well as other areas throughout Britain. And no I'm not a millennial, I'm in my 50's and my dad was in the RAF in World War 2.

    • @jamesmurphy1389
      @jamesmurphy1389 2 месяца назад

      @@Loulizabeth "during the 1920's, 1930's and the 1940's interracial relationships, were common place in places like London..." 🤡No they weren't. What on earth are are you talking about? The only black people in major cities were transients (less than 100) working in the docks of the large cities. Were there occasional love affairs between them and white women? No doubt, but very, very few. HMS WIndrush is celebrated (by some) precisely because it saw (in 1948) the influx of a sizeable number of black people. As for your quoting The Guardian as a reliable source of social history... 🤣Do me a favour.

    • @Loulizabeth
      @Loulizabeth 2 месяца назад

      @@jamesmurphy1389 You saying there weren't doesn't make it to so. There are others who have done research into this out with the Guardian newspaper, but the others say the same thing. However do I think I'll change your mind? No. But do I believe if you genuinely looked into it you would find evidence that what I say, I'm sharing is true. However whether you choose to or not right now we'll simply have to agree to disagree.