General Patton's Death - Accident or Murder?

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  • Опубликовано: 18 дек 2024

Комментарии • 19 тыс.

  • @dustyroads5753
    @dustyroads5753 3 года назад +5982

    A local man who recently died of old age once stopped Patton's car at a checkpoint at gunpoint. The car wasn't marked and he had no idea the General was inside. Patton defended the then young 17 year old private to his superiors saying "I wish I had another hundred boys just like him. He's a damn fine soldier who was doing his job." Patton recommended his promotion to corporal, which he recieved, written recommendation I read for myself from the man's scrapbook.

    • @daviddigital6887
      @daviddigital6887 3 года назад +82

      You watched the last days of Patton movie

    • @AbtinX
      @AbtinX 3 года назад +54

      That's an awful story lol. Now this child is a corporal in the us army.

    • @dustyroads5753
      @dustyroads5753 3 года назад +184

      @RogerwilcoFoxtrot his name was "Pepper" Martin. His father served as a private in the confederate army under General Sterling Price, and later as our circuit court judge

    • @dustyroads5753
      @dustyroads5753 3 года назад +146

      @@daviddigital6887 no I didn't know about that movie. This man was my neighbor. His name was "Pepper" Martin.

    • @dustyroads5753
      @dustyroads5753 3 года назад +66

      @RogerwilcoFoxtrot yes ol "Pep" said that they had orders to not allow anybody through, and that Pattons car was unmarked for some reason (I've forgot why, or if I ever heard why tbh)

  • @kaymuldoon3575
    @kaymuldoon3575 Год назад +490

    My uncle served under Patton and was wounded at the Battle of the Bulge. He was only given about 5 years to live after his injury. He died in 2008.

    • @HomerSaints-lo7zf
      @HomerSaints-lo7zf 10 месяцев назад

      Cool story now delete it and move on no one wants to see your cringe lies

    • @Magicpickle5
      @Magicpickle5 9 месяцев назад +9

      Precious

    • @seankelly1366
      @seankelly1366 9 месяцев назад +13

      My Uncle as well served with the 101st Airborne @ Bastogne...

    • @mikechevreaux7607
      @mikechevreaux7607 7 месяцев назад +3

      @kaymuldoon3575 -
      Same as my WW2 Combat Vet Dad, Wounded In The Battle of the Bulge.

    • @thewonderfulwizardoftheweb1053
      @thewonderfulwizardoftheweb1053 6 месяцев назад +1

      That’s because Patton lied about his size, I’ve also heard that he was a top, so it’s unlikely he was under him.

  • @meaders2002
    @meaders2002 3 года назад +1479

    *[**1:40**] "Patton...was not slow in stating his opinions..."*
    This is British understatement working overtime.

    • @cwf081166
      @cwf081166 3 года назад +19

      @bartley butsford The English have always great manners.
      That is what makes "Our American Cousin still funny to this day.

    • @QuantumMechanic_88
      @QuantumMechanic_88 3 года назад +37

      patton had what was called his "Wagon Train" . Train cars , busses and large trucks where movie stars and celebrities could visit for photo ops . Far , far behind enemy lines and the action . My dad and uncle were 101st Airborne at the time and knew all about "Ole Blood and Guts " - "His guts and our blood" . Don't believe the movies and BS .

    • @scrappydoo7887
      @scrappydoo7887 3 года назад +5

      Agreed

    • @scrappydoo7887
      @scrappydoo7887 3 года назад +7

      @@QuantumMechanic_88 spot on 👍

    • @joshuagibson2520
      @joshuagibson2520 3 года назад +7

      His #1 trait, in my opinion, was the fact that he wasn't a pu$$y.

  • @rexray3530
    @rexray3530 6 месяцев назад +56

    My father served under Patton who was know as 'Blood and guts'. Some said, "His guts and our blood." Patton wanted to declare war on Russia. He said they were more evil than Germany. He said the Russian supplies were gone, and they would surrender in two months. The truck that crashed into his jeep only wounded Patton. In the hospital he was getting better, but died. There was no autopsy!

    • @YHVH-IS-THE-CHRIST-ANOINTED
      @YHVH-IS-THE-CHRIST-ANOINTED 5 месяцев назад +8

      My dad's dad served in the battle of the bulge and apparently Patton too was present then. Everything you said was truth. We know what happened.

    • @Relayzy1
      @Relayzy1 3 месяца назад +3

      ​@@YHVH-IS-THE-CHRIST-ANOINTEDhe outlived his usefulness.

    • @YHVH-IS-THE-CHRIST-ANOINTED
      @YHVH-IS-THE-CHRIST-ANOINTED 3 месяца назад +5

      @@Relayzy1 Who, my dad's dad and Patton? Definitely. My dad innerstands that now, we defeated the wrong enemy. We fought hard, sure, but all in vain, very un-Christian.

    • @nicksambidesjr
      @nicksambidesjr 2 месяца назад +4

      Hitler said they'd surrender in 6 weeks. How did that prediction turn out?

    • @studentaccount345
      @studentaccount345 20 дней назад

      ​@nicksambidesjr Germany was a single nation fighting on multiple fronts against world powers. How does your comparison make any sense whatsoever?

  • @stephenketcham4179
    @stephenketcham4179 3 года назад +365

    My initial reaction to hearing Gen. Patton speak...”He doesn’t sound anything like George C. Scott.”.

    • @fish.161
      @fish.161 3 года назад +35

      bruh i thought he sounded like trump for some reason

    • @mkvv5687
      @mkvv5687 3 года назад +8

      Yeah. I read a while back that he had a higher pitched (his enemies would say "pipsqueak") voice, so I was prepared.

    • @stevenm6922
      @stevenm6922 3 года назад +6

      His son, also a genera,l had the same reaction when he first saw the movie. That in reality, his real voice was kind of high pitched, not like GeorgeC.Scott.

    • @jimdavis8391
      @jimdavis8391 3 года назад +8

      George C Scott was the real Patton, the other one was a phoney.

    • @cliveedwards2958
      @cliveedwards2958 3 года назад +1

      George C Scott had more panache! :)

  • @ethanmaldonado7327
    @ethanmaldonado7327 Год назад +1124

    My great grandfather (on my moms side) was a tank commander for Patton. When Patton got mad at him, he would rip his patches off, then would apologize and give them back. A crazy story is that my grandfather was having a lunch break sitting outside his tank when he noticed that there was an allied plane being attacked by an axis plane. My grandpa told his men to shoot down the enemy plane, and when they did that, the allied plane saw my grandfather and waved. Later my grandfather found out that he was my grandmother’s brother who he saved.

    • @jerrysanders9101
      @jerrysanders9101 Год назад +51

      Wow.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Год назад +17

      Sounds very erratic for a 3 star General! *

    • @dorian4373
      @dorian4373 Год назад

      Patton was in Washington 1932 killing war veterans from world War 1 how does that sound karma is a beautiful thing

    • @arnoldgood1
      @arnoldgood1 Год назад +11

      an amazing story.

    • @LarsCarlsen-or6ky
      @LarsCarlsen-or6ky Год назад

      Sounds like a nut job.

  • @truthofthematter2892
    @truthofthematter2892 2 года назад +1992

    I find it odd that a drunk soldier joyriding in a military vehicle was not charged for killing one of the most famous generals in US history.

    • @jharback
      @jharback 2 года назад +270

      There is a huge difference in public attitude about driving drunk then and driving drunk now. The first drunk driving laws were not even implemented in this county until 35 years earlier in the State of New York. Drinking and driving was very common right up through the 1950's and pretty much acceptable by the public. I can remember being a little kid and driving home with my dad drunk as hell. Happened all the time among "The Greatest Generation."

    • @joshmcdonald7472
      @joshmcdonald7472 2 года назад +274

      @@jharback still ignoring the part where he killed the general. Even if he wouldn’t be arrested for drunk driving, he killed a general.
      Edit: General not his commanding officer

    • @charliekrips6533
      @charliekrips6533 2 года назад +317

      Maybe it got swept under the rug because Patton spoke out that we fought the wrong enemy.

    • @joshmcdonald7472
      @joshmcdonald7472 2 года назад +43

      @@charliekrips6533 I think he just thought we should’ve invaded both not an either or

    • @markoverfelt805
      @markoverfelt805 2 года назад

      @Charlie Krips They should of listened to Patten. They should of allowed Patten run them out of Europe back to atleast Russia. Patten was right. They took over half of Europe. But more aptly put. The Communists enslaved half of Europe. Communism is nothing more than a Satanic form of government.

  • @charmyzard
    @charmyzard 10 месяцев назад +976

    "We defeated the wrong enemy."
    Those words sealed his fate.

    • @dann5480
      @dann5480 10 месяцев назад +107

      Imagine speaking in favour of Nazi Germany 😂😂

    • @yvngxnightmare
      @yvngxnightmare 9 месяцев назад +339

      ⁠@@dann5480he meant the Soviets were worse. He never said anything in favor of the Nazis

    • @Yourmothershouse34
      @Yourmothershouse34 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@dann5480 Nazi Germany wasn't trying to conquer the world and kill everyone fool

    • @E_Clampus_Vitus
      @E_Clampus_Vitus 9 месяцев назад +222

      @@dann5480Imagine being a tool who believes all the lies he’s been told.

    • @cx2900
      @cx2900 9 месяцев назад

      @@dann5480 imagine reflexively calling someone a nazi sympathizer in 2024. the point is obviously that our actions essentially meant the communists won the war

  • @kickingmustang
    @kickingmustang 3 года назад +2882

    There is a fine line between genius and madness that is often precariously walked by the most powerful characters in history.

    • @burnstick1380
      @burnstick1380 3 года назад +84

      Genius or not he was still a POS towards a) his soldiers b) other soldiers (e.g. italian POW)

    • @THE-ge9wi
      @THE-ge9wi 3 года назад +57

      Yeah but the line between sane and deranged is very clear.

    • @bengtbaron2574
      @bengtbaron2574 3 года назад +50

      @kickingmustang good on you for repeating fake MSM cliches.

    • @MrWolfstar8
      @MrWolfstar8 3 года назад +47

      @@burnstick1380 Patton would have fit in the pacific war. Unofficial American policy was never to take Japanese prisoners alive due to Japans abuse snd murder of American POWs.

    • @burnstick1380
      @burnstick1380 3 года назад +12

      @@MrWolfstar8 do you have a source on this? But still doesn't excuse his behaviour

  • @deadlycuber4974
    @deadlycuber4974 3 года назад +2592

    Mark Felton: Was it an accident or murder?
    History Channel: Def Aliens

    • @miguelpereira7934
      @miguelpereira7934 3 года назад +14

      ahaha yep....

    • @Autechltd
      @Autechltd 3 года назад +21

      YFW his death prevented the initiation of the XCOM project

    • @stenbak88
      @stenbak88 3 года назад +5

      Hahaha seriously

    • @mikemontgomery2654
      @mikemontgomery2654 3 года назад +8

      Aliens, tryin to survive in the mountains.

    • @mauriceetal1426
      @mauriceetal1426 3 года назад +7

      Ancient Aliens were never reported as NOT doing do, so what makes you think the modern ones WILL? (Off screen: "what am I talking about again?")

  • @oceanexploration
    @oceanexploration 3 года назад +991

    My wife's grandfather (Emil Bongiovanni) was a medic with the 117th. Normandy through the end, including Bastogne. He says that Patton saved his life. Emil's best friend was the first attending medic to Patton's "accident". The anti-Soviet rhetoric was well-known. Emil said that Patton said, "We are here, we are mobilized, we are strong. They will be the next problem. Let's take care of them now while they are weak". Emil is still alive as of this comment. He is 98.
    Update: Emil passed away at 99 years old, about a year after this comment, just short of 100. To his deathbed he maintained that Patton saved his life and the Russians had Patton killed, which the first responding medic also was certain of in his own words. My wife's late grandmother Gloria also knew this medic well. Sergeant L. Ogden I believe. They were all close friends and good folks.

    • @irvingnerdbaum7256
      @irvingnerdbaum7256 3 года назад +56

      God bless your wife's grandfather!

    • @haraldhimmel5687
      @haraldhimmel5687 3 года назад +50

      Not that they were weak. The Soviets had the biggest standing army in the European theatre by far, about 500 rifle divisions and roughly a tenth of that tank divisions. It was a good thing to call it a day.

    • @WarInHD
      @WarInHD 3 года назад +106

      @@haraldhimmel5687 they’re leadership was broken and they just lost 8.6 million men. We supplied them a lot and we were technologically way ahead of them. Our military was at 16 million compared to their 11 million, so uh we could’ve easily taken them if we wanted

    • @WarInHD
      @WarInHD 3 года назад +18

      @rian marky nah, they would’ve had B-29’s take off from Japan and drop Atomic bombs on Moscow

    • @qtig9490
      @qtig9490 3 года назад +95

      @@WarInHD and we had nukes on the way which they didnt. That the US left some lands such as in Czechoslovakia that later fell under Stalin is horrible. Imagine that suffering going from being under the Nazis to then being under the Soviets.

  • @MojoWrangler
    @MojoWrangler 11 месяцев назад +56

    This was a common talking point for my Grandmother. Her husband was a pilot associated with Gen Clark and the European, North African, and Italian campaigns under him fly reconnaissance missions. They both met and were friendly with Patton although I am not aware that he had actually ever served with them directly. I cannot recall who he was flying for (command) for the invasion of Germany proper. She was absolutely convinced that his accident was actually murder and would argue a case for it till just before she died.

  • @strelok5581
    @strelok5581 3 года назад +842

    So he was literally getting better, then dies with no autopsy. Big think.

    • @Gargatul0th
      @Gargatul0th 3 года назад +88

      Once people start suspecting an assassination conspiracy an intelligence agent comes out with a story so ridiculous that it couldn't be true. Then the press, that never coordinates with intelligence agencies, elevates the obviously false story, thus disproving the entire theory of an assassination conspiracy. Brilliant analysis!

    • @HW-sw5gb
      @HW-sw5gb 3 года назад +23

      This happens all the time even today though. It was especially common back with 1945 medicine.

    • @cyberdemic
      @cyberdemic 3 года назад +44

      @@Gargatul0th It's just a coincidence, everyone knows that the good side won the war, look at the world now, everything is okay *-*

    • @seanehz
      @seanehz 3 года назад +8

      @@Gargatul0th Indeed. Look into Gareth Williams of GCHQ.. died in suspicious circumstances to say the least and then the media publishes a story about his activities based on likely falsified information provided by his previous employer.

    • @aldofitla6657
      @aldofitla6657 3 года назад +2

      @Derek Jackson Why Orwell's death is shaddy?
      I found nothing on Google.

  • @Gl6619
    @Gl6619 Год назад +311

    I can never get over how Patton actually sounded..especially after having George C Scott’s portrayal embedded in my mind.

    • @AlphaFlight
      @AlphaFlight Год назад +18

      Omg I know. He had that old new York tang lol

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 Год назад +49

      George C Scott was a better Patton than Patton was.

    • @Frip36
      @Frip36 Год назад +13

      You could not possibly get more hard nosed Yankee than Patton. @@AlphaFlight

    • @CJArnold-hq3ey
      @CJArnold-hq3ey Год назад +3

      @@craigthescott5074 ease up son hahahaha

    • @Matt_History
      @Matt_History 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@Frip36he was literally an ethnic and cultural southerner. His accent sounds nothing like a New Yorker or a Californian from the era despite growing up in California

  • @f4ust85
    @f4ust85 Год назад +991

    Here in the Czech republic he is a legendary and respected figure to this day for his anti-soviet stance and attempt to push eastwards and liberate the country before Soviets do. Of course his role and the fact that he got all the way to Pilsen, refuting the idea that Central Europe was liberated entirely by Russians, was covered up and virtually illegal to say for 45 years. During the communist era, there was even a widely known underground rock song that goes "I insist that Pilsen was liberated by Patton".

    • @r.menzel8020
      @r.menzel8020 Год назад +50

      My father ended WWII in Pilsen. I'm guessing he must have been with Patton after reading your comment. He was a 2nd lieutenant. He had an indian head insignia patch on his shoulder.

    • @petergorman361
      @petergorman361 Год назад

      @sambankman-Zelensky

    • @iwanttosleep5053
      @iwanttosleep5053 Год назад +1

      ​@sambankman-Zelensky🤦🏽‍♀️...

    • @franceyneireland1633
      @franceyneireland1633 Год назад +15

      @f4ust85 You might want to consider looking up Operational Unthinkable which wasn't released till 1998. Winston pushed for this in about June 1945 ( a square deal for Poland) likely to enforce at the time the recently signed Yalta Agreement. There was Polish and Czech fighter pilots who helped defend Britain in the Battle of Britain who had escaped their own countries when they had fallen to Germany. In June 1941 Hitler ordered Operation Barbarossa to invaded the Soviets, Stalin turned to the allies for help, Stalin agreed to release the Polish military Stalin had in prisons since Stalin invaded Poland to fight under British against the Germans, Stalin agreed then there would be an independent Poland. Only when Germany surrendered when the Polish men who returned to Poland were persecuted, jailed and killed by the Soviets. The Soviets couldn't be trusted then, the same for the Russians today.

    • @f4ust85
      @f4ust85 Год назад +9

      @@franceyneireland1633 I am of course well aware of that and find it equally bizarre and hilarious. The sheer idea that he (Churchill) could have any kind of military success against the Red Army machine in mid-1945 when he had one third of the forces on the continent was absurd. Moreover, the Poles that Stalin still mentioned in political talks were long burried in Katyn or dying in forced-labour farms in Kazakhstan, he simply didnt want to admit that he wiped them off, read Bloodlands by Timothy Snyder for details.
      But the idea that "hot" conflict is inevitable and approaching has been actively promoted in Central Europe until mid-1950s by Western media such as Radio Liberty/Free Europe/Voice of America and even led to various unfortunate excesses and local uprisings that of course in turn recieved zero western support and were destined to fail. People in early 1950s really expected its a matter of months. A good example are the Mašín brothers who set up an underground network and literally blasted their way into West Germany with guns in their hands and joined US special forces, wanting to soon return on an American tank - only to be bitterly disappointed that no such plans or eventuality ever existed and it was all just propaganda and empty posturing. They havent returned to this day.

  • @safarygirl
    @safarygirl 7 месяцев назад +18

    My mom was in the Buchenwald Concentration Camp Payton’s Army liberated. Her name is listed in a book written by another surviving prisoner who was a lawyer educated enough to write it “Greek Women in Nazi Camps” What she described in that book is what my mother described.The only difference is the author was taken out of the camp in a Death March while my mother was left behind.They tried to gather and remove the prisoners but left because Pattons Army was just about there. My mother said they all got up from bed and looked out the window and saw the last German solder the older or oldest one she said he was, leaving the camp with gate open. The first thing they all did was run down to the kitchens to get food. The author of that book was on that march and survived by escaping while on that march.

    • @MarciaDurkee
      @MarciaDurkee 4 месяца назад

      Oh wow! Your mother is a survivor of one of the worse concentrazione camps In Germany.And she survive to tell the stories!I admire ppl like that.

  • @deano6912
    @deano6912 2 года назад +948

    The fact that he wished to be buried amongst his men rather than Arlington deserves credit.

  • @jeremyparsons9152
    @jeremyparsons9152 3 года назад +977

    A drunk AWOL soldier kills a 4 star general and no charges filed!? Hmmm

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +40

      He didn't kill the general. The general was injured and was taken to a hospital. Such minor accidents were common in the Army. If they filed charges every time some soldier bumped his truck into another vehicle, they would still be holding trials today.

    • @clivebaxter6354
      @clivebaxter6354 3 года назад +178

      @@leezaslofsky4438 But he was drunk (no test) in a truck he should not have been in and rammed a 4 star generals car, who then dies, not an ordinary minor accident

    • @SciFiGrinch
      @SciFiGrinch 3 года назад +54

      @@clivebaxter6354 And did you see the picture of the damage to the car? That was not a bump. It likely was an accident but no charges? The driver of the truck was lucky Patton was injured and passed out cause he likely would have shot him right there in the street.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +12

      @@CovidIslandDiscs You are upset because the young impaired driver had caused a non lethal road accident (Patton was injured; he died later in hospital) was not thoroughly investigated?
      You are upset because no one thought there was any kind of conspiracy behind the accident? You would have ordered a thorough investigation?
      This is what conspiracy thinking leads to: endless suspicion, endless calls for investigation, endless complaints that "they're hiding something". And in the end, nothing is clarified, nothing is revealed, it was all a big waste of time. (Think: Benghazi or Whitewater).
      In those days, they had better things to do than sit around "investigating" a road accident to see if someone was "behind" it.

    • @dx1450
      @dx1450 3 года назад +4

      I highly doubt there was anything sinister about the accident. I mean, sure the driver of the truck screwed up and turned right in front of the car, but that's no guarantee that Patton would be killed in the crash. There are certainly better ways to assassinate someone. Poison their food and then claim they died of a heart attack, for example.

  • @adambotha01
    @adambotha01 3 года назад +415

    I love how in a span of a few years Patton's views on the Russians went from being an embarrassment to being the norm

    • @arealfpsdiehard
      @arealfpsdiehard 3 года назад +82

      People were pissed about communism but they tried to be diplomatic about it. Patton was just too straight to the point.

    • @afkorey2151
      @afkorey2151 3 года назад +107

      The Bolsheviks created what we know as the Soviet Union, very few if anyone knows it wasn't 'Russians' who overthrown the Russian Empire in 1917 and even created the 'Red Army', I wonder why that is? Maybe it's due to that 'influence' in the media that Patton spoke about, which is still very much alive today.

    • @warrenmilford1329
      @warrenmilford1329 3 года назад +18

      Most people in the west, including the politicians and top brass from the western allied countries, always knew exactly what the soviets were like, but they had too be diplomatic about the delicate situation they were now faced with. Patton definitely wasn't.

    • @paixducoeur
      @paixducoeur 3 года назад +41

      @@afkorey2151 And who created the Bolsheviks? who financed them and so on. you have to dig deeper and you realise thats still going on today.

    • @thechekist2044
      @thechekist2044 3 года назад +7

      @@afkorey2151 The Russian Empire that kept the country of Russia was overthrown by Russians and not only the Bolsheviks had the vast majority of Russians supported the Bolsheviks the Bolsheviks themselves were majority Russian indeed, however they were ethnically diverse.

  • @marcotelli1601
    @marcotelli1601 Год назад +119

    One thing for sure is hes the only person that died from an accident in back seat of a Cadillac at 20 mph.

    • @TheSuperappelflap
      @TheSuperappelflap 6 месяцев назад

      Come on. Convenient train. Convenient army truck that swerves conveniently at the convenient time. Convenient ambulance nearby. What do they say again at the American agencies? Coincidences dont exist? How about 4 of them in a matter of minutes. JFK died under less suspicious circumstances.

    • @nicksambidesjr
      @nicksambidesjr 2 месяца назад

      Not surprising when you consider how cars were made in those days and what his car ran into.

    • @VolkerGoller
      @VolkerGoller 2 месяца назад

      Cars at the time were not very safe

  • @GrayWolf-745
    @GrayWolf-745 Год назад +195

    My late uncle Adrien Gagnon from New Hampshire is buried in the same small American Cemetery in Hamm Luxembourg that Gen. Patton is buried in. I visited the cemetery in 1975 as an American US Army soldier. My uncle died in action on January 1, 1945 during the Battle of the Bulge. May God grant peace to the fine soldiers buried there.

    • @Ellecram
      @Ellecram Год назад +10

      I went there this year. Very calm, beautiful place.

    • @GrayWolf-745
      @GrayWolf-745 Год назад +9

      It is a nice resting place for those brave men. Local families 'adopted' gravesites and placed flowers on them regularly as thanks to those who died liberating their country from occupation.@@Ellecram

    • @Ellecram
      @Ellecram Год назад +6

      @@GrayWolf-745 Very interesting to know. Thank you for your reply.

  • @deborahkelly1489
    @deborahkelly1489 3 года назад +206

    My dad was a pilot and served in three wars . WW2, Korean and Vietnam. He served 33 years and loss many of his friends. He was on the corner of the street when General Patton funeral procession passed by . He had several stories of Patton , several of the same things this professor has talked about. I love the work this professor does. Everything he puts out is interesting. I love history especially European history and WW2 history.
    My dad is 94 and is still taking care of his own business.

    • @ken_caminiti
      @ken_caminiti 3 года назад +6

      Does your dad know we fought the wrong enemy?

    • @deborahkelly1489
      @deborahkelly1489 3 года назад +3

      @@ken_caminiti I have no idea.

    • @zaramby
      @zaramby 3 года назад +8

      @@deborahkelly1489 I hope he's doing alright! Fighting the wrong enemy or not, he was defending his country.

    • @deborahkelly1489
      @deborahkelly1489 3 года назад +6

      @@zaramby Thank you very much he is doing great. I hope to go down to Florida when I get back on my feet from surgery. You have a good day/ evening.🙂

    • @extzy7851
      @extzy7851 3 года назад +2

      @@deborahkelly1489 your dad is still alive????

  • @richardlecomte6839
    @richardlecomte6839 2 года назад +3074

    They didn't want Patton coming home and getting into politics.

    • @jumpkickman8524
      @jumpkickman8524 Год назад +104

      ((They))

    • @hondaxl250k0
      @hondaxl250k0 Год назад +597

      Don’t forget right before his “ accident “. He publicly stated we fought for the wrong side..

    • @masamune2984
      @masamune2984 Год назад +63

      No one did. Thank god.

    • @mysticthesauce
      @mysticthesauce Год назад +175

      @@jackandblaze5956 yeah cause trump was infamously known for being tough and aggressive on american enemies

    • @casebarreoltt5990
      @casebarreoltt5990 Год назад +3

      @@jumpkickman8524 Thoy

  • @BillMcSwain
    @BillMcSwain 11 месяцев назад +166

    20 miles an hour, a broken neck, and a huge laceration on his head? Sounds a little fishy to me.

    • @dikferrari1396
      @dikferrari1396 10 месяцев назад +25

      Have you ever hit your head while going at 20 mph? 😅 I guess not.

    • @peaceonearth351
      @peaceonearth351 10 месяцев назад +7

      Patton ordered the medical staff to pull the plug on the ventilator that was keeping him alive. In 1945 they did not know how to fix a broken spine and with Patton being a General, he knew the injury was untreatable. Shortly after a Doctor figured out a way to fuse the spine of someone with a SCI (Spinal Cord Injury). That's why there are paraplegics and quadriplegics today.

    • @cutterpatterson6368
      @cutterpatterson6368 10 месяцев назад +29

      Remember this was before the days of seat belts and air bags. A minor car accident today was no laughing matter back then. Also, coming to a sudden stop even at 20 mph can launch people.

    • @BillMcSwain
      @BillMcSwain 10 месяцев назад

      @@dikferrari1396 yes

    • @happilyham6769
      @happilyham6769 10 месяцев назад +19

      What's fishy is that no one was charged and the accident was considered a fender bender.
      In reality a drunk driver destroyed a car carrying a 4 star general. Eventually resulting in his death.

  • @DeltaV3
    @DeltaV3 3 года назад +376

    If ever a man deserved to have over 1 mil subscribers it is Felton. A living legend.

    • @billyc9707
      @billyc9707 3 года назад +6

      I always refer him whenever I watch any war documentaries. Nobody complained or said a bad word yet. I'm so glad I discovered this channel. Made quarantine easier for sure

    • @tashahatzidakis5680
      @tashahatzidakis5680 3 года назад +2

      I’ll be back

    • @JiveDadson
      @JiveDadson 3 года назад +1

      So it's not Pewdiepie. Interesting.

    • @mohammadfarooqi6255
      @mohammadfarooqi6255 3 года назад +1

      Nazi lover he is loving Himmler and Goering etc.

    • @mohammadfarooqi6255
      @mohammadfarooqi6255 3 года назад +1

      He loves Nazis Felton

  • @FFEMTB08
    @FFEMTB08 3 года назад +523

    Patton wasn’t wrong about the Soviets... look how out of control they were at the end of and after WW2.

    • @lawsonj39
      @lawsonj39 3 года назад +29

      They were also traumatized by Hitler's attack on the Soviet Union, and America's heavy involvement in Europe after the war aroused a lot of very understandable paranoia on the part of the Russians.

    • @patrickmorrissey3084
      @patrickmorrissey3084 3 года назад +7

      @@Diabetic_Chicken69 Had it not already been agreed upon that Greece would fall under the American and British spheres of influence?

    • @lavillablanca
      @lavillablanca 3 года назад +46

      Winston Churchill tried, to no avail, to make FDR see the threat of the Russian Commies. After an all day meeting with Stalin, Churchill asked him about starving the Ukrainians and Stalin shrugged it off. See Churchill: A Life by Martin S. Gilbert.

    • @white-dragon4424
      @white-dragon4424 3 года назад +90

      @@lawsonj39 Stalin and his Commies were WORSE than the Nazis. They murdered many more millions in the gulags than the Nazis did in the death camps. Stalin was also more unhinged than Hitler was. The only difference were their victims.

    • @Safelanding2
      @Safelanding2 3 года назад +16

      @@white-dragon4424 yeah and if Hitler got his holding in Soviet territory like he wanted the genocides there would be far worse than that is I would say the nazis were worse by a lot except for Stalin we was quite close for the atrocities

  • @johann428
    @johann428 3 года назад +400

    My grandfather met him and shook his hand in Stockholm one month before he died.

    • @ajmpatriot4899
      @ajmpatriot4899 3 года назад +16

      Your grandfather killed Patton?
      Lol

    • @ken_caminiti
      @ken_caminiti 3 года назад +18

      Does your grandfather celebrate hannukah?

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 3 года назад +6

      Hope he didn't carry an umbrella with him

    • @davidmullan2217
      @davidmullan2217 3 года назад +4

      @kantenklaus calling bs

    • @athrowaway3487
      @athrowaway3487 3 года назад +3

      Cap. He did the Pentathlon in the Stockholm Olympics...
      in 1912

  • @erikguth4830
    @erikguth4830 8 месяцев назад +15

    While exiting the local Walmart check out with my grandson two elderly men sitting in the bench with WWII Patton hats on I walked up to them and spoke. I introduced my grandson and said I wanted him to meet men of the greatest generation who were actual war hero’s. It was summer and I had chills head to toe as the men spoke. At the end the one man said to me that they both served directly with General Patton. With a stone cold look that dynamite wouldn’t have cracked he said “They killed Patton” he then elaborated what I’ve always thought based on the works in places today. WWII and all wars is a move for control against all people. America fought 6 divisions of Germans while Russia fought 25. We didn’t win anything. The “Dulles” brothers had their puppet hand up Stalin’s behind puppeteering the proxy Cold War. Control / control / control. Patton was an American big mouth that knew what was up especially when he could have defeated Germany by himself but was continually held back for war propaganda promotion and production of the new agenda. Throughout society and history you’ll see those who spoke up and out and they are now in graves. It’s always been that way since Christ. If you can’t stand on truth then you stand for nothing and fall for it all.

    • @hoodatdondar2664
      @hoodatdondar2664 4 месяца назад +1

      Take your meds.

    • @erikguth4830
      @erikguth4830 4 месяца назад +4

      @@hoodatdondar2664 how could you make that statement? These were men who served and saluted Patton personally. What possibly could you add to a moment such as that? (Take your meds) sort of middle school bully tactics isn’t it? Can’t quite think of anything important to say so you open your mouth to expose not me, but yourself.

  • @jeremiahkivi4256
    @jeremiahkivi4256 3 года назад +441

    You don't just end up 50 miles from where you are supposed to be when you are on duty. I think allegations of foul play are at minimum warranted.

    • @chinggiskhuree5748
      @chinggiskhuree5748 3 года назад +3

      Absolutely! BTW if you're related to Heidi & Andrea, I went to grade school with them! 💝

    • @LesSharp
      @LesSharp 3 года назад +4

      I don't know. I thought quite a bit of malarkey was tolerated, with the war just being won and all.

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 3 года назад +31

      More than that, car accidents typically don't cause pulmonary edema, or heart failure...Especially when it was not even present at the time of the crash; Immediately diagnosed with only a Stethoscope...Literally the FIRST LESSON in medical school! MURDER! What DOES cause pulmonary edema/heart failure; POISONING!

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 3 года назад +22

      @@LesSharp Not "that" kind of malarkey; He realized the TRUTH; Banksters, and crooks start wars to send OTHER PEOPLES KID'S to DIE for a PROFIT! That's why the "fools" comment...Mothers get their children back in boxes( If they are lucky), and a few very rich men, get even RICHER off of their blood! Name a SINGLE modern POLITICIAN that carried a rifle in the war that they started? NONE!

    • @chinggiskhuree5748
      @chinggiskhuree5748 3 года назад +9

      @@brentfarvors192 You've nailed it squarely, Brent. I always said "The CFR only plan wars; they never fight in them." I'm guessing you are familiar with the Council on Foreign Relations, hmm? 😭😒🐍

  • @mahadragon
    @mahadragon 3 года назад +219

    On the day Patton died, he had been improving and he was due to be transferred. His nurse checked on him and he was in good spirits. She went to run some errands. When she returned, Patton was dead, having died from pulmonary edema. Very strange indeed.

    • @LTPottenger
      @LTPottenger 3 года назад +49

      And you would not be in good spirits with pulmonary edema and it doesn't just suddenly come on. It is a slow debilitating death.

    • @wmpetroff2307
      @wmpetroff2307 3 года назад +48

      Similar to Princess Diana. EMS at first say she was gonna survive then at the hospital some strange people came by....and then she died.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +15

      This kind of thing happens all the time. Patient seems to improve, people become hopeful, but the improvement was temporary.

    • @oregrug2201
      @oregrug2201 3 года назад +9

      @Womb Raider He's here to spread left-wing rhetoric the same way I'm here to spread right-wing rhetoric. He's just too much of a sperg to pull it off. Nobody cares about your lengthy youtube essays, Lee. All of us here know the US Govt is guilty as sin.

    • @ek8710
      @ek8710 3 года назад +1

      @@oregrug2201 well said

  • @keiththomas3141
    @keiththomas3141 3 года назад +198

    Why do records always go missing? If there wasn't something to hide then the records would still be there.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +4

      Nothing to hide. Missing paperwork is common in all bureaucracies.

    • @mizzouranger134
      @mizzouranger134 3 года назад +4

      That’s just simply not true… it was the middle of a war records are not the top priority by a long shot. Also damage time and human error always account for the vast majority of lost records.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад

      @@mizzouranger134 There were plenty of witnesses who saw the accident, who cared for Patton in hospital.
      If someone deliberately got rid of any records to cover up a serious crime, that person could have been severely punished if found. Why would anyone risk that?

    • @oregrug2201
      @oregrug2201 3 года назад +10

      @@leezaslofsky4438 You definitely have some sort of emotional attachment to this. I've seen so many paragraphs (including a massive essay of yours on an above comment) about all of this. "If someone deliberately got rid of any records to cover up a serious crime, that person could have been severely punished if found. Why would anyone risk that?" Why do people commit any crimes at all? Money. OR like in your case... ideology, the same reason you're obsessed with this comment section. Because human beings have a Will to Power and will exercise their agendas no matter what.

    • @cl570
      @cl570 3 года назад +4

      Let me remind you that during WW2 we almost killed the president on board a battleship because the crew accidentally loaded live torpedoes. On top of this, Kennedy's brain is still missing. So is it really not that hard to say that these things just.. happen?

  • @pedenmk
    @pedenmk 11 месяцев назад +46

    We the public will never know. It would not surprise me the least if this man was murdered. After all look at all the suspicious deaths since. Thanks for sharing.

    • @rtflone
      @rtflone 5 месяцев назад +3

      A 20 mph car crash didn't kill Patton. Whatever they did to him in the hospital killed him.

  • @cyberpimp29
    @cyberpimp29 3 года назад +24

    The sound of the Mark Felton Production has become like a pavlovian bell - it fills me instantly with joy and makes any day better

  • @davidhemsworth4098
    @davidhemsworth4098 3 года назад +123

    The motor accident seems neither here nor there, but the sudden deterioration in hospital could stand dilating on

    • @NoNo-fy3kr
      @NoNo-fy3kr 3 года назад +6

      Indeed.. And yet.. Mark here seems to dismiss the possibility out of hand.

    • @djpy6574
      @djpy6574 3 года назад +5

      I believe you are right. The accident was caused by drunkeness and misfortune but why were the soldiers driving drunk not punished? He was recovering in the hospital AND PLANNED TO WRITE A BOOK DENOUNCING THE USA GIVING UP EASTERN EUROPE TO THE RUSSIAN SOVIET BOLSHEVIKS!
      Warmonger U.S. Pres. Truman who used A bombs on behalf of Joe Stalin against Japan twice and hoped to get the U.K. to do it again would have been hurt by Gen. Patton's allegations against his administration and the USSR wanted him dead! Poison to do him in in the hospital is a reasonable suspicion!

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 3 года назад +2

      @@djpy6574 keep sniffing wood glue, sparky.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +1

      @@djpy6574 Patton's book would have been one of many produced by the right wingers in America, along with many articles and broadcasts. His opinion was not unusual. He was part of a loud but not very numerous faction who regretted the alliance with the USSR and would probably have been happier fighting alongside Hitler.
      But Hitler declared war on the US, so he outsmarted himself and made it impossible for the right wing to argue against fighting him. Another bold gamble by Hitler than went badly wrong.

    • @gyderian9435
      @gyderian9435 9 месяцев назад

      The guy is a historian, he makes videos about things he can verify actually happened. If he starts giving light to conspiracy theories he would lose his credibility

  • @smc9108
    @smc9108 3 года назад +126

    My grandfather who served in WWII went to his grave insisting Patton was terminated. By whom was one of his favorite topics to discuss

    • @canadianmmaguy7511
      @canadianmmaguy7511 3 года назад +18

      Gods chosen people?

    • @jorgemoll5994
      @jorgemoll5994 3 года назад

      Ben Gurion...

    • @Hasdac
      @Hasdac 3 года назад +1

      @curtis allen Zionism is the Problem RUclips The king David's hotel bombing and The Sergeant's Affair...

    • @canadianmmaguy7511
      @canadianmmaguy7511 3 года назад +1

      @curtis allen with all due respect, hasn't britain been a vassel of the rothschilds since the bank of london? So gods chosen people

    • @canadianmmaguy7511
      @canadianmmaguy7511 3 года назад

      @Robert Freisler sabbatai zevi sir?

  • @nautifella
    @nautifella 2 месяца назад +3

    One of my uncles by marriage was clerk on Patton's staff, from Morocco to Bavaria. During one of Ike's reelection campaign stops in Detroit in '56 , my uncle, while shaking Ike's hand said: _"Georgie was right about the russians, wasn't he general"_ Ike replied by shaking his hand again and saying: _"Yes, he was."_
    Several members of my family were there along with other witnesses. One of my cousins has the picture.

  • @matthewjay660
    @matthewjay660 3 года назад +191

    Dr. Mark, I have never heard Patton’s voice before. Thank-you for this! I’ve only ever had to image his voice like George C. Scott’s portrayal.

    • @BadWebDiver
      @BadWebDiver 3 года назад +7

      Yeah, his real voice is quite a revelation. A little more high pitched and nasally than what I imagined.

    • @lallen4999
      @lallen4999 3 года назад +2

      His voice sounds effeminate

    • @briankistner4331
      @briankistner4331 3 года назад +4

      @@BadWebDiver George.... HE IS Patton!! (sorry!!) I find the real one a bit of a disappointment. His voice and his stature just don't measure up to George C. Scott.

    • @stevearno100
      @stevearno100 3 года назад +12

      sounds a bit like Donald Trump - even has the same lip movements

    • @andygossard4293
      @andygossard4293 3 года назад +1

      It was reminiscent of cartoonist Mel blanc and absolutely nothing like gcs

  • @agrosyntrop
    @agrosyntrop 3 года назад +1266

    When you drive into a 4 star general killing him, and no futher charges are made. You know whats up.

    • @Shepard_AU
      @Shepard_AU 3 года назад +86

      Imagine this exact scenario but on the German’s side. Wouldn’t end well for the person who caused it.

    • @steveh156
      @steveh156 3 года назад +68

      Patton told the MP's not to charge the driver.

    • @cwg9238
      @cwg9238 3 года назад +46

      this is what happens when you dont wear seat belts (or when they dont even exist yet)

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 3 года назад +124

      There were a staggering number of deaths and injuries from vehicle accidents in WW2... as already mentioned... no seatbelts... fatigued drivers ... little lighting at night etc. Sometimes accidents just happen.

    • @mattmopar440
      @mattmopar440 3 года назад +39

      @@trooperdgb9722 Thank You some sense in the comment section

  • @cahg3871
    @cahg3871 3 года назад +341

    A convenient death for an inconvenient man?As for whether it was an accident or murder,I can’t say for certain.But I’m sure many of his enemies breathed a sigh of relief when he died.

    • @Atti19216
      @Atti19216 3 года назад +5

      The ones that were left

    • @chrishandsome4267
      @chrishandsome4267 3 года назад +1

      @@Atti19216 he died in 1945

    • @Atti19216
      @Atti19216 3 года назад +10

      @@chrishandsome4267 yes and before he died in 1945 he helped defeat a lot of his enemies. Or was enemy killing not allowed until 46?

    • @sheilagravely5621
      @sheilagravely5621 3 года назад +24

      He was a genius in war, no matter what faux pas came out of his mouth. I believe he was murdered with all my heart.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +1

      @@sheilagravely5621 How was he a "genius"? He was a charismatic war leader, that's true. But what did he do to be rated a "genius"?

  • @Edgy01
    @Edgy01 11 месяцев назад +7

    I wound up meeting his son, General George S Patton, Jr. while serving as a young officer in Germany in 1977. He was very self-centered, and just, I can only only imagine, like his father. Patton was a man that the US needed at the time. He probably shortened the war, and ultimately saved many lives. He wouldn’t have ever made general in today’s army. He might have made colonel, today. Maybe. The US uses people, and then when done with them, casts them aside. I enjoyed the movie Brass Target which certainly presented some counter theories to what might have happened. And ultimately, his early death saved Harry Truman with figuring out what to do with him.

  • @annereilley4892
    @annereilley4892 3 года назад +235

    9:30 I think he misquoted patton, this is the quote I found, "It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived." I couldn't find the quote Felton used.

    • @archlich4489
      @archlich4489 3 года назад +21

      Really? That changes things significantly.

    • @annereilley4892
      @annereilley4892 3 года назад +11

      @@archlich4489 Google it, it's the only thing that comes up. I tried googling what felton wrote and that doesn't come up. It's possible he said both and what felton found is too obscure to come up.

    • @cabin_fever
      @cabin_fever 3 года назад +27

      lol if thats the real quote i dont think i can take anything else in these vids seriously again

    • @annereilley4892
      @annereilley4892 3 года назад +2

      @@cabin_fever I'm just saying that's the quote that comes up, page after page when I enter the keywords that Felton said. It's entirely possible he said what felton quoted, but is obscure and didn't come up in search. Try searching for it and let me know what you find.

    • @andreialexandrunichiforel
      @andreialexandrunichiforel 3 года назад +1

      @@annereilley4892 You'd probably need to go to a library to find local articles from that day. Surely they would write about a general calling fallen troops fools.

  • @tedtimothy9074
    @tedtimothy9074 3 года назад +558

    My Dad was in the Army during WW2. He was in North Africa. One day he was sitting on the ground with his back against a tree. General Patton approached. My Dad started to get up. Patton said, don't. By the way, my Dad was awarded the Silver Star for gallantry in action. He very rarely talked about it, but I read the citation. He was a hero. This was before cell phones.They communicated by wire. My Dad laid the wire. From the Citation, his unit was under heavy fire. The enemy kept shooting out the communication line. His unit was , in effect, isolated. They were in a forward position, under heavy fire with no outside communication. My Dad found a way around the shooting.. He laid the wire and was able to restore contact with the main unit

    • @kubaAk47
      @kubaAk47 3 года назад +5

      Im a hero too

    • @Hosidius
      @Hosidius 2 года назад +42

      @@kubaAk47 your generation is cut from a different cloth... is it because you came out of the closet? So heroic

    • @kubaAk47
      @kubaAk47 2 года назад +7

      @@Hosidius Everybody who is wearing uniform in this country is automaticly a hero. Dont you know that? Dont you wach fox news?

    • @soundinsight1076
      @soundinsight1076 2 года назад +1

      I was in ww2 as well full stop.

    • @williamweir2744
      @williamweir2744 2 года назад +4

      @@kubaAk47 say who

  • @brushylake4606
    @brushylake4606 Год назад +502

    "Nothing was said about a conspiracy until thirty years after his death." Maybe not officially, but it was a well-known and oft discussed subject amongst the veterans who served under him. My grandfather was wounded at Bastogne and believed it was a conspiracy almost from day one. He wasn't the only one. Amongst Patton's men, it was a relatively common belief. Generally, it was believed he wanted to get into politics and the powers-that-be wouldn't allow that to happen.
    I can date my grandfather's assertions personally to the late 1970s. I'm 50 years old and I know he was telling me this in 78 or 79. I know he'd never read the book, nor did he see the movie. In fact, the last movie he saw in the theater was "Patton" in 1970 or 1971. My mother said that he had told her this when she was a child in the late 50s or early 60s.

    • @vidavuk1649
      @vidavuk1649 Год назад +37

      It is really astonishing that he died after all the war operations in car accident. It is simply not to believe.
      Probably he was dangerous for after war situation because he was not typ that you could manipulate.

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Год назад +2

      your grandfather was one of Patton's men? if so tell me do you believe he was murdered or assassinated because I'm not sure about that really Patton was a hot head and got in trouble many times for his month and anger you really think anyone was worried about him don't think so

    • @brushylake4606
      @brushylake4606 Год назад +28

      @@charlestorruella8591 I don't know. I never said anything about what I believe. Read what I said.
      The narrator said that the "Patton was murdered" accusation only became a thing thirty years after he died because of a book. That simply isn't true. I was just adding to the information that the video was conveying.
      Whether or not Patton would have been electable isn't something that I know for sure. What I do know is that a certain segment of the population idolized Patton and the political and military establishment hated him. Many of the soldiers he commanded and some civilians believed he might run and the powers that be had him eliminated.
      I think that is certainly possible, as no one in the political establishment would have wanted Patton anywhere near D.C.
      So, to answer your question, I don't know if he was murdered to prevent a possible run for office, but my grandfather and many other people believed it long before the book mentioned in the video advanced the idea.

    • @chrisdraughn5941
      @chrisdraughn5941 Год назад +22

      @@vidavuk1649 Assassinating someone with a car accident is extremely inefficient. Especially when they survive and are sent to a hospital. A plot like that requires way too many people to be involved with it. It’s a preposterous plan, and I seriously doubt any professional assassin would come up with plan that would involve so many different points of failure and so many people that would increase the chances of it being uncovered.

    • @monicadelano256
      @monicadelano256 Год назад

      It is what I alwayns thought

  • @Lordbigtime
    @Lordbigtime 11 месяцев назад +103

    Patton was the only one that truly understood how dangerous the Soviets were. He understood that if they were not stopped while United States was on a war posture that they would dominate Europe and Asia.

    • @BrianRenardDavis
      @BrianRenardDavis 11 месяцев назад +3

      Brother When You Find The Time Look Up The Heartland Theory

    • @sehu1291
      @sehu1291 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not the only one. Google operation unthinkable

    • @BrianRenardDavis
      @BrianRenardDavis 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@sehu1291 Just When I Thought It Couldn't Get Any Deeper. Time To Pour A Drink

    • @TheInternationalBlackLipPlate
      @TheInternationalBlackLipPlate 11 месяцев назад

      Patton didn't like jews and said we fought the wrong enemy... how right he was.

    • @stoopidapples1596
      @stoopidapples1596 10 месяцев назад +8

      Absolutely not the only one, the US was already on their way to preparing the cold war long before ww2 ended. The difference between Patton and many more political figures like Roosevelt was the rhetoric he used. Like seen in this video, he had a view of Russians that was similar to how the Nazis saw them, as inferior human beings, even elevating german citiens above russians. He saw communism as a threat not only because it would hurt people who lived there, but because he essentially saw it as a rival religion that must be crusaded against. This is where he went wrong, and it's absurd to me that I see so many people blindly defending him in this comment section with absolutely no regard to either this or the fact that he was essentially using his army for personal errands, and that he literally permitted the use of war crimes.

  • @geeky12ful
    @geeky12ful Год назад +87

    My uncle served under Patton in Africa; he had the utmost respect for him & said he was the greatest general.

    • @Thee-bob
      @Thee-bob 6 месяцев назад

      Because he was. I have done multiple projects studying Patton. He is truly other than perhaps General Stonewall Jackson the best we have ever had.

  • @elizabethpatience6523
    @elizabethpatience6523 3 года назад +92

    My Grandfather who fought in WW1 and worked on PT boats in WW2 believed right away that Patton was taken out by the US because he was causing international issues and they knew they could never shut him up. Many of his former solider colleagues felt the same way.

    • @williamcornish3175
      @williamcornish3175 3 года назад +26

      My uncle who served under Gen. Patton and years later the CIA in Vietnam always said the general was murdered.

    • @OldCommando
      @OldCommando 3 года назад +1

      @Steve Acho shut up tankie. We all know damn well he died because of the gov

  • @tomek9966
    @tomek9966 3 года назад +398

    As a Pole I have to agree with Patton - we have lost the war...

    • @istoppedcaring6209
      @istoppedcaring6209 3 года назад +36

      The way the Poles were done in was unacceptable and the way we put remembrance over history has to end

    • @japeking1
      @japeking1 3 года назад +29

      If the Germans had won, you wouldn't be a Pole. You wouldn't be. And nor would I.

    • @paulcoleman5512
      @paulcoleman5512 3 года назад +42

      @@japeking1 Hear me out on this but perhaps the op was referring to Patton's statements as being defensive of Western (European) civilization and vehemently anti communist. Look at the state of the US as well as Western Europe, especially with the mass migration and changing demographics. These people are no longer hiding their hatred towards us.

    • @japeking1
      @japeking1 3 года назад +18

      @@paulcoleman5512 "These people are no longer hiding their hatred towards us." Which people? And who are "us"?
      Throughout history all societies have grown, flowered, then faded. Demise always feels sad but is in fact just a stage in an ongoing process which we can do little to direct. And so far the attempts to direct society have been disastrous ( Sparta being a prime example, but Fascism, Communism, Xianity, and Nazism being other more recent glaring failures.)

    • @paulcoleman5512
      @paulcoleman5512 3 года назад +42

      @@japeking1 Which people? I'm pretty sure you know what their ethnicity and religion is. I'll give you a hint 'Bergs, Steins' etc. Every anti white article I've read, as well as NGO's whom promote and actually bring migrants from the third world are of that tribe. Also the West is currently being murdered shall we say. Diversity isn't a strength by any means, it has completely destroyed any and all cohesion that once used to exist. In order to get a better picture of what's coming and the future these 'elites' want try and watch a RUclips channel titled "Way of the World".

  • @vids4791
    @vids4791 8 месяцев назад +3

    Weird facts: As General Patton died in 1945, George C. Scott who played Patton in "Patton", served in the Marine Corps from 1945-1949. As Patton died, George C. Scott was unknowingly preparing for his role 30 years later--where Frank McCarthy, a brigadier general, was producer for the film and was a close acquaintance of Dwight Eisenhower. "Patton" began filming in 1969, the year Eisenhower died, and was released in 1970. Scott won "Best Actor" but refused the award. McCarthy accepted the award on his behalf.

  • @beth6252
    @beth6252 3 года назад +462

    I was surprised to find his snow covered grave in an American cemetery in Europe. Luxembourg, I think. Beautiful place.

    • @c.b.-11
      @c.b.-11 3 года назад +13

      Glad you visited his Grave.

    • @bogusmogus9551
      @bogusmogus9551 3 года назад +28

      Yes, did you happen to notice the German cemetery opposite?
      At least he is buried next to his friends and foe. Like he wished, and not in Arlington.

    • @FormerGovernmentHuman
      @FormerGovernmentHuman 3 года назад +4

      Samu Crow
      It seems Patton himself may have agreed if that quote tumbling around the internet is authentic.

    • @ProfShibe
      @ProfShibe 3 года назад +4

      @@samucrow7564 They killed our people first and declared war on us first. We obviously were supporting the communists, but they shot first when they shouldn't have.
      Shame.

    • @LeatherCladVegan
      @LeatherCladVegan 3 года назад +2

      You'd think one would remember such a discovery, in such a 'beautiful' place, with a little more precision than 'Luxemburg, I think'.

  • @themightiestofbooshes9443
    @themightiestofbooshes9443 2 года назад +226

    I think the greatest honor you can receive as an officer in command is to be buried among the fallen you had once commanded. Not that those fallen would appreciate the man who sent them to their deaths being among them, but as a way for the commander to humble himself and spend that eternity with the men he once called brothers.

    • @MartinMcAvoy
      @MartinMcAvoy 2 года назад +22

      General Anders who led the Polish II Corps in Italy, died in London in 1970 but chose to be buried with his lads in the cemetery overlooking Monte Cassino where more than a 1000 Polish died fighting in 1944.

    • @QUICKIRONS
      @QUICKIRONS 2 года назад

      Uh, when your meat care expires YOU get out and go home...

    • @Baseballnfj
      @Baseballnfj 2 года назад +14

      Robert Gould Shaw Col. Of the famed 54th Massachusetts regiment was burried in a common grave with his African American soldiers. Union officers offered to return his body but his father declined saying "we can think of no holier place than where he now lies."

    • @MartinMcAvoy
      @MartinMcAvoy 2 года назад

      @@Baseballnfj Colonel Shaw's dad was probably ḋіѕģսѕtеḋ that his son rode with a bunch of no-good ոіǵǵеrѕ and didn't want him back! Does anybody really believe that the USA would not be happier, richer and more peaceful, if all the ոіǵǵеrѕ were freed in 1865 and immediately returned tо Αfrіса. Ꮮіոсοⅼո ḣаḋ а рⅼаո tо ḋероrt tḣеⅿ and it is still not too late to carry out his wish!

    • @ProudMasterMason
      @ProudMasterMason 2 года назад +1

      Well Sir, Gen. Patton was following orders.

  • @hornetIIkite3
    @hornetIIkite3 3 года назад +145

    I wish my grandfather was alive to see your channel. He would have loved the clear explanation and details of your stories

  • @MasterBlaster-nz3uv
    @MasterBlaster-nz3uv 11 месяцев назад +10

    Don't even need to watch this to know. We've been using the same play book since 1916 or 1865, you pick.

  • @jondellinger3367
    @jondellinger3367 3 года назад +379

    May be because of this?
    "Gentleman I have come this morning to the inexcusable conclusion that we have fought on the wrong side. This entire war we should have fought with the fascists against the communists and not the other way around. I fear that perhaps in 50 years America will pay a dear price and become a land corruption and degenerate morals"
    Patton

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +21

      He was talking treason. The Germans declared war on the US.The USSR fought beside the US.

    • @borismuller86
      @borismuller86 3 года назад +25

      Imagine defending the Nazis like this.

    • @beatlesrgear
      @beatlesrgear 3 года назад +54

      Patton needed to recognize that Fascism and Communism are twin sisters. There is very little difference between the two and the US has now become a Fascist nation. True freedom has been lost, the Constitution means nothing to the US Govt (and half of all Americans) anymore, and utter lawlessness is rampant.
      We need Gen Patton back to fight the Socialist enemies within.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +24

      @@beatlesrgear Patton would have been a Trump supporter. He was a right winger who repeatedly disregarded his obligations as a general in the US Army. He had to e pulled from command of the 3rd Army for months because of his brutal treatment of a soldier suffering from PTSD. He was fired as Military Governor of Bavaria for making pro-Nazi comments.
      His only objection to a dictatorship in America would be if he wasn't the dictator.
      There is a lot of difference between Fascism and Communism. It was the fascists who declared war on the US. It was the Communists who fought alongside the US as an ally against fascism.
      Stalin was a murderous tyrant, guilty of millions of deaths. BUT he never invaded another country (except Finland, to make some border revisions).
      Hitler was a murderous tyrant who invaded many countries, many of them neutral. It was Hitler who started WWII. Stalin did not start any wars (except with Finland, for limited goals).
      Hitler was a vicious, murderous racist, who sent millions of innocent people to the gas chambers, or had them gunned down. 25% of those people were children.
      The Communists did not persecute people because of their "race", though Stalin did single out some nationalities for punishment (Poles, Chechens, Crimean Tartars, Volga Germans etc) for supposedly helping the German invaders.
      No one nowadays supports Stalin's kind of "socialism". Today socialists like Bernie Sanders support democracy and legality, and abhor violence and war. Socialist governments have been elected in many countries, from Scandinavia to Latin America, and have upheld democracy and human rights, and have handed over power when they lost elections.
      It's time for you to update your understanding of socialism, fascism, etc.

    • @scrimmybingus4871
      @scrimmybingus4871 3 года назад +41

      "Corruption and degenerate morals"
      Was he a fortune teller in his free time?

  • @robertwidby2205
    @robertwidby2205 2 года назад +118

    The “accident” didn’t kill anyone else but Gen. Patton. That fact alone is suspicious. Were his injuries survivable? Then, he improved only to take a turn for the worse. Maybe it was a stroke of bad luck, but the missing details of the wreck add to suspicion. And all the other factors, and no autopsy. One of those things we’ll never know for sure, but it doesn’t sound right.

  • @lucieleimbach
    @lucieleimbach Год назад +128

    My uncle fought under Patton in the 3rd army. He loved Patton. I’ve read my things and heard many more theories about his death. There were too many of the theories not really taken seriously. There if I’m correct in my reading about the truck driver and Payton’s driver causing the accident, only the truck driver was sent out of the country. There are too many inconsistencies. If you don’t trust him recall him to the states.

  • @Deeplycloseted435
    @Deeplycloseted435 10 месяцев назад +7

    A drunk solider 50 miles from his post, crashes into a general, who eventually dies from his injuries, and what happened to Thompson the driver?

  • @FLV.USA.CONSTITITION.2ND.
    @FLV.USA.CONSTITITION.2ND. 3 года назад +281

    Men like Patton are hated until you need them, then once their done with him, you hate him again!

    • @jamesbrown4092
      @jamesbrown4092 3 года назад +4

      So true.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 3 года назад +13

      Pretty much. Effective assholes never stop being assholes, they just increase their efficiency to compensate.

    • @WestSide1207
      @WestSide1207 3 года назад

      *they're

    • @PaulabJohnson
      @PaulabJohnson 3 года назад +3

      Exactly. Look at Bomber Harris

    • @FLV.USA.CONSTITITION.2ND.
      @FLV.USA.CONSTITITION.2ND. 3 года назад +5

      We need more like Patton and strong military men that will stand behind men like Patton!!

  • @LawAbidingCitizen33
    @LawAbidingCitizen33 3 года назад +422

    "The difference between genius and insanity is measured only by success."
    - Elliott Carver

    • @paulherzog9605
      @paulherzog9605 3 года назад +5

      or wealth

    • @culturalliberator9425
      @culturalliberator9425 3 года назад +4

      That's a good quote

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад

      You quote a James Bond movie character? Thanks.

    • @andrewmantle7627
      @andrewmantle7627 3 года назад +1

      @@alfa-psi I think that's what was said by the commenter. Beware the authoritarian. All of them, without exception.

    • @lisalida6233
      @lisalida6233 3 года назад +1

      Actually, no. Many corrupt @$$h0les have purloined or suppressed the work of greater, more adept and inventive, creative people. The ones who think outside the box, or shift the inside contents of "the box" are willing to be more outre' (than the
      stodgily prosaic) and thus, "ccentrics, and thus also more vulnerable to exploitation and intellectual properties Scientific discovery thefts. Boo! Lisa Rae Rousseau a.k.a. Lisa R.R.McGuire-Smith, writer, mother, wife, artist.

  • @billsmith9711
    @billsmith9711 3 года назад +132

    My dad spoke of Patton's killing long before 1974. Many men from that time thought the same thing. no accident

    • @Android3008
      @Android3008 3 года назад +11

      Also he's being rather condescending, he usually is above that sort of thing

    • @billsmith9711
      @billsmith9711 3 года назад +7

      @@Android3008 - to mention first discussed in 1974 shows he is clueless.

    • @partygrove5321
      @partygrove5321 Год назад

      @@kosmicman2011 Try being rational, you "Patton was murdered" nutz seem to forget that you lack any evidence.

  • @donaldrice5281
    @donaldrice5281 9 месяцев назад +52

    General Patton was murdered is without question. His history of saying what he thought with little regard for the consequences is what brought about his demise.

    • @hoodatdondar2664
      @hoodatdondar2664 4 месяца назад

      Says a random Internet poster with an undocumented statement.

  • @amadeusamwater
    @amadeusamwater 3 года назад +202

    I find it strange that driver of the truck wasn't charges with something.

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 3 года назад +34

      Grinning like a fool and he gets off Scot free

    • @dustycups
      @dustycups 3 года назад +35

      It's pretty much just the standard way cops treated drink driving back then. "Ok mate just drive carefully back home, then tuck yourself into bed with a nice Bonox. Take the back roads next time"

    • @duke14616
      @duke14616 3 года назад +11

      Story I heard from my Dad who was in Third Army during and post WWII. That Patton himself called off the MP's. That was what the story was at the time. Guess there was quite a bit of drunken unauthorized joy ridding going on after the war.

    • @edwardhollon3914
      @edwardhollon3914 3 года назад +13

      In the earliest accounts of this accident ,IMMEDIATELY following the incident. PATTON directed that NO CHARGES were to be brought against the truck driver.
      I believe all this hullabalou about assination is an attempt to SELL BOOKS.

    • @duke14616
      @duke14616 3 года назад +10

      @@edwardhollon3914 I agree about the book's. But again according to Dad, Patton had lined things up in such a way. Rearming the Germans and kicking the Soviet's butt. Could have happened easier than not. Was why Patton got transferred to 15th Army. The recovery he was experiencing in hospital, then not, is suspicious. Plus the NKVD was afraid of him. They pulled off the murder of Polish Officers in Katyan Forrest and it didn't come out till the 90's I believe. That it was true the Soviets not the Germans did that.

  • @brose321
    @brose321 Год назад +152

    My father was a WWII fighter pilot in the Pacific. He was a career military officer in the USN until 1959. He always believed Patton was assasinated as opposed to an accidental death. For what its worth....

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Год назад +3

      Let’s be honest here though, don’t you think that part of that may be because it’s hard to believe that a minor car accident killed a man as legendary as him? I’d be in disbelief too, but that’s because it would make me think about my own mortality even more. It’s hard to believe that a man as great as him could die in such a mundane accident.

    • @Foxtrot-jr5qu
      @Foxtrot-jr5qu Год назад +5

      @@Sniperboy5551 It could be, since everything is possible. Some folks just are more curious than others and want to learn more if there's more, while most folks just don't care and they just bite the ''official'' story for absolutely everything and they laugh at those who are trying to find out what really happened and call them crazy conspiracy theorists. I'd rather be called a crazy conspiracy theorist, than an NPC who believes every official narrative and doesn't even try to think or to connect the events or whatever and accept it as it is. Isn't everyone who goes against the ''norm'' and what is ''accepted' called crazy? If Patton really was assassinated, what would you expect them to say? The military especially are well known for having their secrets and their favorite phrase to the public being - ''that's all you need to know''.

    • @LeeZaslofsky
      @LeeZaslofsky Год назад +2

      My dad was a navigator in the Army Air Force, fighting in the Pacific. He understood that Patton was killed in an auto accident.

    • @JoeCitizen-gp3gf
      @JoeCitizen-gp3gf Год назад +2

      ​@@Foxtrot-jr5qu please us army known screwed killings of folks not well executed assassination . That oss or cia or nsa

    • @JoeCitizen-gp3gf
      @JoeCitizen-gp3gf Год назад

      Why because army quiet effective assignations?

  • @Radhaugo108
    @Radhaugo108 3 года назад +2040

    The United States has a peculiar track record of “unlucky” undesirable leaders who pass under “totally normal” circumstances.

    • @simonjohnston9488
      @simonjohnston9488 3 года назад +54

      Nonsense.

    • @KcarlMarXs
      @KcarlMarXs 3 года назад +45

      I think you've misplaced this: Allende, Sankara, Castro (survived) etc. The US assassinates any popular movement not serving capital & racism

    • @gourmetwaters6916
      @gourmetwaters6916 3 года назад +173

      @@KcarlMarXs Yeah, racism and money are the answer to everything.
      That's totally why the US spent all that money fighting Germans and Russians.

    • @joedoe-sedoe7977
      @joedoe-sedoe7977 3 года назад +101

      Don’t you find it telling that we have the derogatory term “conspiracy theorists “ but no “coincidence theorists”?

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +16

      @@gourmetwaters6916 When did the US fight Russians? Never, that's when.

  • @georgesparks9206
    @georgesparks9206 11 месяцев назад +4

    Years ago, I talked to an old military man named Bill that worked and U.S Pipe in Burlington New Jersey. I delivered steel for their pipe making. Bill worked the gate and took care of the paper work and scale. He told me he had a trusted friend who never lied or said anything bad about anyone. He told Bill he was working the gate as a guard when Patton left. He told Bill about 2 or 3 minuets after Patton left, he heard a gun shot. He said about 2 or 3 minuets later, someone came back in the gate and said Patton was dead. The man told Bill, there were no target shooting that day anywhere on base and the shot came from the way Patton left. If you knew Bill, he was no one to tell a tale. I think Patton was shot and killed like JFK and others who went against the grain of our government.

  • @grc70
    @grc70 3 года назад +273

    The fact that he requested that he be interred with the fallen men he led in battle says much about him. he could've been given a heroes funeral in Arlington National Cemetary, but chose to lie with the ordinary soldiers he led. Much of his concerns about what would happen between the west and the U.S.S.R would be proven correct. Like most great people, he had flaws. His greatest flaw, was being right about many things that would happen in post war Europe. He was a great war time general, but a lousy peace time general.

    • @david-468
      @david-468 3 года назад +5

      The only people I’ve ever heard say he was a “bad peace time general” were commies that have zero historical knowledge considering he was a general for close to 30 years and both world wars, also the United States never had “peace time” unless you count the years between world wars however those were anything but peaceful

    • @MariettaFarley
      @MariettaFarley 3 года назад +13

      Patton was just a lousy politician. The world is poorer for his loss.

    • @david-468
      @david-468 3 года назад

      @@MariettaFarley ya know what’s crazy? You’re so ignorant you think he was a politician

    • @david-468
      @david-468 3 года назад +1

      @@MariettaFarley maybe before claiming historical figures are “terrible” do an ounce of research

    • @jpc443
      @jpc443 2 года назад +4

      @@david-468 One doesn't need to be an elected official to be involved in politics. When an individual occupies the military profile such as Patton did, everything you say and do has political ramifications, Patton knew that.

  • @MWcrazyhorse
    @MWcrazyhorse 3 года назад +191

    note: If you are an important political/ military figure NEVER go on any "hunting trips"...

    • @ashokafulcrum4795
      @ashokafulcrum4795 3 года назад +30

      But if you are a young soldier on a joyride, riding an army truck 50 miles from where you actually had to travel,..
      You can have as many accidents as you want. No charge will ever be filed,...

    • @Ulvetann
      @Ulvetann 3 года назад +12

      Reminds me of Dick Cheney. Never stand next to him if he handles a shotgun.

    • @homelessEh
      @homelessEh 3 года назад +1

      basically every big wig should avoid hunting.. would You miss a chance to Hunting Accident nancy peloci? i wouldnt ..soo we dont hunt here lol safer for every one..

    • @Wuestenkarsten
      @Wuestenkarsten 3 года назад

      @Honkler Bear: ....or never enter an Invitation to be driven in a Cabriolet, especially in Dallas....;-)

    • @Jupiter__001_
      @Jupiter__001_ 3 года назад +1

      EUIV flashbacks to max stat heirs dying in hunting accidents...

  • @roscoewhite3793
    @roscoewhite3793 3 года назад +42

    "We could go on about this all day..." You make that sound like a bad thing, Dr Felton.

  • @quadrasaurus-rex8809
    @quadrasaurus-rex8809 7 месяцев назад +29

    He brushed up against the Zionists and then figured out that all roads lead to Rome. That will get you deleted in his position. He simply knew too much.

    • @himpim642
      @himpim642 5 месяцев назад

      he hated jews and russians not much better than nazis he foguht-not strnge he said he fought wrong enemy he belonged on nazi side.

    • @hoodatdondar2664
      @hoodatdondar2664 4 месяца назад

      Ok, Heinrich.

    • @quadrasaurus-rex8809
      @quadrasaurus-rex8809 4 месяца назад +1

      @@hoodatdondar2664 if you’re implying I’m antisemitic you’re barking up the wrong tree. Zionism is a Roman project to restore the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. I fully support the Jewish people’s right to a state in their ancestral homeland. That isn’t the current situation though, they are being taken with a grift run by their traitorous court Jew leaders with the help of freemasonry. They deserve a proper government without interference. I would wish the same for my own country.

  • @axer3515
    @axer3515 2 года назад +137

    It was very strange that the accident that killed him was not investigated throughly.

    • @shabushabu5319
      @shabushabu5319 Год назад +30

      Hmmmm👃

    • @manonfire3642
      @manonfire3642 Год назад +11

      Reportedly, it wasn't the accident that killed him.

    • @user-fs5ji1tv6l
      @user-fs5ji1tv6l Год назад +12

      He was poisoned in the hospital.

    • @bluewendigo672
      @bluewendigo672 Год назад +18

      We defeat the wrong Enemy...... George Patton

    • @1963Austria
      @1963Austria Год назад

      Hmmmmm.......the USa Government covering up something....never.......

  • @Aenntw
    @Aenntw 2 года назад +78

    In 1916-17 Patton entered Mexico as part of General Pershing's detail, which had been sent to track down and capture Pancho Villa. In one skirmish Patton killed Villa's lieutenant, Julio Cardenas, but never got close to capturing Villa. A showdown of Villa and Patton would have been interesting.

    • @williamcaspers7087
      @williamcaspers7087 Год назад +4

      Yes it would have been remembered as HASTA LA VISTA VILLA...

  • @georgequalls5043
    @georgequalls5043 3 года назад +167

    I think there was speculation about Patton’s possible murder much earlier than 30 years after his death. For what it is worth, I saw it in a comic book when I was a child in the late 1950s.

    • @GhostRanger5060
      @GhostRanger5060 3 года назад +63

      It's been a theory since the day it happened. Most people today are unaware that 1940s Americans were not the stooges today's troglodytes make them out to be. In fact, I would argue that people are more easily misled today due to the overwhelming addiction of post-modern people to electronic stimuli and fantasy/virtual living.

    • @gregb6469
      @gregb6469 3 года назад +32

      @sosy1178 -- Yeah, Dr Felton is usually very good on history, but this time he is pushing the officially determined story. I wonder if he thinks there was nothing fishy about the 2020 election.

    • @TheSuperhoden
      @TheSuperhoden 3 года назад +5

      You were a child in the 50's? That's amazing

    • @gregb6469
      @gregb6469 3 года назад +15

      @@TheSuperhoden -- Why would that be amazing? There were a lot of children around in the 50s.

    • @TheSuperhoden
      @TheSuperhoden 3 года назад +9

      @@gregb6469 yes, but not many 70+ year old people are on RUclips

  • @karaDee2363
    @karaDee2363 11 месяцев назад +9

    I remember my dad who fought in Italy saying he didn't think much of Patton or Montgomery, because they were arrogant and got many infantrymen killed unnecessarily because they liked seeing their names in the Press.
    I don't think the accident was planned, but maybe took advantage of the opportunity to get rid of him while he was in the hospital.

  • @leonardjoseph7276
    @leonardjoseph7276 3 года назад +130

    My father was an MP with the 3052nd, said any serviceman hitting a staff car would have been arrested and charged. Every driver, armored or quartermaster was instructed that staff cars have the right of way no ifs ands or buts. The damage in the photos is about what you would see for a 20mph crash.

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini 3 года назад +12

      Them cars was made out thick good steel. You could hit a tree low speed of 20 mph head on & be lucky if a small dent might not even scratch it. Them cars side impacts with × frame common in them days was there weak spot. They was not made like pop cans cars like today. That tk. Hit that car it had push it 100+ yards if not longer @20mph for that damage. Even if that speed true? Look much higher speed to myself. Just that 1 point alone. Tk driver been cuff & stuffed no mater what. Whole wreck dont match up with the offical story. Hit a General even if his faught. Anybody else would been held until direct orders from main top of command.. Plus Patton wife just about got killed landing in airforce plane there too. Very close. That stupid trying land in very bad weather. Specially with VIP citizen aboard. Was everybody drunk?

    • @gulanhem9495
      @gulanhem9495 3 года назад +3

      @@Houndini
      Learn to write properly. Nobody understands that drivel. What a waste of time.

    • @willa.568
      @willa.568 3 года назад +13

      @@Houndini you sound drunk

    • @BrisLS1
      @BrisLS1 3 года назад +14

      I was in a small compact car and hit a tree at 40mph without a seat belt. Came away with a broken wrist and a headache. This 20 mph seems suspicious, but maybe the strength of those old thick steel cars made them even more dangerous? They don't crumple, and the occupants are subjected to the full impact. I can only imagine what the back of a school bus seat would be like without the padding. Or if you were on an old roller coaster with no harness and it hit something. Still, paralysis is a lot different than a concussion to the head. The driver was drinking? Nowadays, if you drink and hit nobody and get caught, you immediately have your life disassembled by the government. You get probation and drug tests before even being convicted. A conviction means insurance cost blowup, loss of driving privilege, weekly classes where threats are made on your freedom, Installation of alcohol detection devices in your car, all told about $10,000 US. Different times for sure.

    • @matty6848
      @matty6848 2 года назад +6

      @@Houndini which explains why such serious injuries happened at such low speeds. The reason why modern car crumple so easily is because their designed to take the impact, thus protect the driver and passengers aka “ crumple zones” the idea is the car exterior collapses thus bears the majority of the impact, it takes away the kinetic energy of the impact to those inside and protects them in the process. If you have a car that is solidly built like a tank the moment you hit another object car, wall, tree etc the inhabitants of the car take the entire brunt of the impact, rather than modern cars that are designed to crumple and absorb the energy of the impact. That’s why more people survive car accidents today than ever before. Modern cars are designed to disintegrate on impact. If Patton had the same accident in a modern car, he’d most likely have walked away. Not with the serious injuries he had

  • @ws1011
    @ws1011 3 года назад +263

    I had never heard of his mysterious death until my Grandpa brought it up, he served in a tank division in WW2 over in Germany and I remember him telling me about it.

    • @gulanhem9495
      @gulanhem9495 3 года назад +30

      Your grandpa fought the wrong enemy.

    • @ahsanmohammed1
      @ahsanmohammed1 2 года назад +5

      The movie Brass Target not available on Netflix, Apple movie store, Amazon Prime TV.
      Coincidence?

    • @matty6848
      @matty6848 2 года назад +8

      @Gulan Hem no we didn’t. The Russian never bombed British cities the Germans did. Nazi Germany had to go down and we got the job done. All very well saying that if your country or cities have never been bombed and attacked.

    • @Stongray67
      @Stongray67 2 года назад +5

      My father was with Paton it’s know form the insiders next to Patton is Eisenhower had him assassinated Eisenhower was nothing more than a traitor if it wasn’t for Patton we were lost at war Eisenhower was a traitor and should’ve been dealt with us so

    • @MrAdamchristopher2
      @MrAdamchristopher2 2 года назад +4

      @@matty6848 when were british cities bombed? What happened in August of 39? Start asking questions and looking for answers.

  • @jamesmcgrath1952
    @jamesmcgrath1952 3 года назад +85

    I find it interesting that when people today think of General Patton they tend to think of George C. Scott's performance but in reality Patton sounded more like Elmer Fudd lol.

    • @beefy_chud8916
      @beefy_chud8916 3 года назад +7

      I recently watched Patton for the first time and then went and listened to the real Patton speak.....I was blown away lol

    • @boathemian7694
      @boathemian7694 3 года назад +5

      George Scott was a brilliant actor. Patton brutalized US veterans who marched on DC to cash their war bonds. To hell with him.

    • @beefy_chud8916
      @beefy_chud8916 3 года назад +8

      @@boathemian7694 lol okay guy......while I do not agree with everything about Patton, I still respect the man. He fought in 3 different Theatre’s of war. The Nazis feared him and for good reason, and while brash and outright dumb in some of the things he has said or believed. His ability to command troops was important to winning the war. So while he was kind of a dick, he was still a badass.

    • @jamesmcgrath1952
      @jamesmcgrath1952 3 года назад +4

      @@boathemian7694 While Patton was there (so was Eisenhower) it was MacArthur who ignoring orders advanced on the Veterans.

    • @wallsign4575
      @wallsign4575 3 года назад +2

      @@jamesmcgrath1952 Absolutely correct. In fact, Patton disliked the orders to oppose the vets.

  • @zappababe8577
    @zappababe8577 23 дня назад

    Wow, the music accompanying that newsreel footage! So heroic!

  • @W1se0ldg33zer
    @W1se0ldg33zer 3 года назад +80

    Can't imagine being jostled around in the back of one of those military ambulances with a broken neck for 50 minutes.

    • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
      @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking 3 года назад +10

      James Dean died in a similar way. He was loaded, breathing, into a station-wagon ambulance. That ambulance got in an accident. His head slammed the bulkhead - and he (further) broke his neck.

    • @Assassino275
      @Assassino275 3 года назад +4

      @@KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking God damn

  • @vladpavlo
    @vladpavlo 3 года назад +715

    " We've defeated the wrong enemy "
    -- General George S. Patton Jr

    • @anasevi9456
      @anasevi9456 3 года назад +38

      he was an ideologue, he would have fought in the white army had he been born 20 years prior.

    • @joaobordini3903
      @joaobordini3903 3 года назад +107

      @@anasevi9456 He would? Now I like him even more

    • @davidpowell6098
      @davidpowell6098 3 года назад +179

      He admitted ,once the German surrendered, he wanted to re arm them, join the allied forces to them , and defeat the Russians .I wonder what this world be like if that
      would have happened. I will always believe he was murdered.

    • @TheGravitywerks
      @TheGravitywerks 3 года назад +88

      @@davidpowell6098 he was aware of Stalins purge of millions, prior to WW2

    • @ruffkuntry2574
      @ruffkuntry2574 3 года назад +56

      @@davidpowell6098 America could have gotten the Japanese on board against the communist as well invading Russia from the east.

  • @Kidraver555
    @Kidraver555 3 года назад +220

    The old 'Hunting Party' accident scenario.

    • @blacktoothfox677
      @blacktoothfox677 3 года назад +29

      just be thankful Cheney wasn't there

    • @arnonuhm4022
      @arnonuhm4022 3 года назад +9

      Well, that kind of scenario ends with someone accidentally shot or disappearing completely in wilderness.

    • @eedwardgrey2
      @eedwardgrey2 3 года назад +22

      Yeah but it's common etiquette to wait until the hunting before the accident

    • @andrewkappler5503
      @andrewkappler5503 3 года назад +2

      @@blacktoothfox677 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @GaryNumeroUno
      @GaryNumeroUno 3 года назад +1

      At least the hunting rifle didn't accidentally discharge as it fell onto the grassy knoll!

  • @arthurmorgan3180
    @arthurmorgan3180 11 месяцев назад +18

    Ok but can we appreciate that cool ass helmet he’s always wearing, just seems very iconic to me

  • @vegasdano7569
    @vegasdano7569 2 года назад +314

    My dad’s general, 👍🏼. My dad was in the service 1943 - 1946. He admired the general.

    • @PhilipFear
      @PhilipFear 2 года назад +16

      I had a close friend who served under Patton in Europe after D-Day and loved his leadership....
      We'll never know if the General was assassinated or not for sure....
      And even if he was We'll never know by who....
      Like JFK, too much has been lost to time and or cover-up to make any definitive conclusion possible....
      Serfises to say, the technology did exist to make the series of events that paralyzed General Patton and put him into the hospital where he died, as an attempt on his life (as with JFK and the speculation of CIA and FBI involvement) but those who know are long since dead....
      And the paper trail of such an operation would most probably be non-existent (if they were smart) and the same thing would be true for any conspiracy over General Patton if it was the case to be true....

    • @vegasdano7569
      @vegasdano7569 2 года назад +4

      @@PhilipFear you are right 👍🏼👍🏼

    • @hindenpeter2.04
      @hindenpeter2.04 Год назад

      @@PhilipFear He's listed as a freemason so maybe the divil was sick of him saying half redpilling the crowds.

    • @elijahwood5447
      @elijahwood5447 Год назад

      Jews murdered him. Disgusting evil people

    • @vegasdano7569
      @vegasdano7569 Год назад

      @@elijahwood5447 that’s stupid.

  • @uni4rm
    @uni4rm 3 года назад +55

    I think it unusual that an apparent drunk driver wasn't charged or held responsible for the accident. Especially since the driver was essentially AWOL and in accordance with military justice would be at the very least charged with dereliction of duty, since he was at least an hour from where he was supposed to be working. Even back then, MP's and command were pretty strict about that sort of thing.

    • @jasonnewstead3174
      @jasonnewstead3174 2 года назад

      Yeh the US is as corrupt as they come.

    • @peaknonsense2041
      @peaknonsense2041 2 года назад +4

      They were far more strict back then about AWOL.

    • @MyCharlie20
      @MyCharlie20 2 года назад +3

      I also find this very suspicious!!! as mark was telling the story it was almost as if he was trying to characterise or emulate the assailant to this fit (eg AWOL, lack of concern, drunk) so i was surprised to hear the verdict, of his, at the end.

  • @jackjohnhameld6401
    @jackjohnhameld6401 3 года назад +65

    George Patton's Diaries are compelling and honest: as ever Mark Felton does a superb job.

  • @091461
    @091461 11 месяцев назад +4

    When Patton said “we defeated the wrong enemy”, he was a dead man. That comment/observation revealed the confederacy of the Ashkenazi Jews set in place by the Balfour declaration.

  • @raoulchapman7310
    @raoulchapman7310 3 года назад +81

    My Grandfather served under Patton. Always had high praise for him. Told me about Patton personally pinning on his Purple Heart, then telling him to "Get up off your ass and get back to work!". Grandad always chuckled when he told that story.

    • @David-yo5ws
      @David-yo5ws 3 года назад +12

      Your like a breath of fresh air! Nice to read some facts. All this other BS in the comments was fouling my lungs.
      I am living a life of 'comparative' freedom, because of men like your Grandfather and Patton. Praise to them both.

    • @C0wb0yBebop
      @C0wb0yBebop 3 года назад +1

      Patton’s men HATED him. With a passion.
      I’m not sure your grandpa remembers it correctly or perhaps time and nostalgia has modified his opinion. His men feared him more than the enemy.

    • @David-yo5ws
      @David-yo5ws 3 года назад +17

      @@C0wb0yBebop What a fn liberty. Telling someone you don't know, how their Grandpa (who you also don't know) just might have got his memories crossed, about a war that you never fought in.
      What a T.W.A.T you are!

    • @thievingdisc779
      @thievingdisc779 3 года назад +15

      @@C0wb0yBebop ah yes so you are the representative of all the men who served under him throughout the entire war? Didn’t think so.

    • @raoulchapman7310
      @raoulchapman7310 3 года назад +9

      You'd had to have met my Grandfather. He was a bigger hardass than Patton ever could've been.
      I'm sure that some of his men hated him. Maybe most, I wasn't there. He certainly didn't seem to care much about the butcher's bill.
      But those same traits that caused people to dislike him endeared him to others.
      My grandfather was a hard-nosed, hard driving, often angry man. I did/do love him but his children didn't like him much.

  • @jeffsanders1609
    @jeffsanders1609 3 года назад +482

    “There are no accidents.” -Master Oogway

    • @bogusmogus9551
      @bogusmogus9551 3 года назад +11

      Yes.
      That's why I'm here

    • @leafygreens8624
      @leafygreens8624 3 года назад

      Based

    • @tarikasis2738
      @tarikasis2738 3 года назад +3

      Da , no accident, a complot with russ and demo hands

    • @thegrayyernaut
      @thegrayyernaut 3 года назад +4

      @Mr. Caesar Everything in life, that happens, happens because of a series of events leading up to them, not because of accidents.

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 3 года назад +1

      Oogway was like 800 years old, so he knew about the Patton 'accident' personally.

  • @jaremaw2368
    @jaremaw2368 3 года назад +819

    _"I'd rather have a German Division in front of me than a French one behind."_

    • @michaelhourigan2599
      @michaelhourigan2599 3 года назад +35

      Brilliant

    • @davesaldana7263
      @davesaldana7263 3 года назад +14

      So true

    • @knightowl3577
      @knightowl3577 3 года назад +44

      Plenty of British troops said that but replaced French with American.

    • @camdenduffy8744
      @camdenduffy8744 3 года назад +1

      Daaaaaamn!

    • @waynehanley72
      @waynehanley72 3 года назад +83

      @@knightowl3577 That the British got off the beaches at Dunkerque was due in large part to the extraordinary bravery and sacrifice of the French who held the line against overwhelming odds. Read the German accounts of French soldiers (not the generals).

  • @honorablegent1201
    @honorablegent1201 Год назад +3

    Just because you cant find information about something on the internet does not mean there were not rumors or others speaking about a conspiracy before 1974.

  • @MrStehooper
    @MrStehooper 3 года назад +171

    The US has history in this theatre, I see a Patton forming.

    • @unclenogbad1509
      @unclenogbad1509 3 года назад +1

      Owwwww

    • @xander9564
      @xander9564 3 года назад +5

      Good comment. I'm going to have to be Patton you on the back for that one.

    • @tomhansen7582
      @tomhansen7582 3 года назад

      I may be dumb, but, ¿Qué?

    • @victorbonilla4634
      @victorbonilla4634 3 года назад

      @@tomhansen7582 I see a pattern (Patton) forming..play on words joke.

    • @francescopapa3511
      @francescopapa3511 3 года назад

      Stop it Dad!!

  • @aldofitla6657
    @aldofitla6657 3 года назад +1241

    " I prefer a German Division in front of me ,
    than a French Division behind me."
    General Patton

    • @koen8185
      @koen8185 3 года назад +21

      Not to speak about a whole Greek division behind him , the horror....

    • @naj289
      @naj289 3 года назад +98

      " I say quotes he never said to receive internet points "
      Cumbrain Aldo Fitla

    • @SCHMALLZZZ
      @SCHMALLZZZ 3 года назад +90

      "Meme untill they cry, then make memes about them crying"
      -Heinz Guderian

    • @dutch148
      @dutch148 3 года назад +59

      "The NKVD send their regards"
      -Drunk American truck driver

    • @roberthoward9500
      @roberthoward9500 3 года назад +23

      Which is such a dick thing to say since I think the French taught Patton how to fight in WW1.

  • @Superbowfin60
    @Superbowfin60 3 года назад +162

    My father was a tank commander in the 14th armored 47th tank battalion 7th army he told me after the germans surrendered that they weren't allowed to stand down and Paton wanted to go after the Soviets and drive them back to Russia Paton thought they were worse than the germans. My father thought they murdered him for it .

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +8

      The 3rd US Army against millions of Soviet soldiers, commanded by Zhukov, Konev, Rokossovsky? They would have made mincemeat of him and his little army long before he got anywhere near the USSR.

    • @Superbowfin60
      @Superbowfin60 3 года назад +40

      @@leezaslofsky4438 the only reason Russia was able to defend herself from the nazi hordes is because of all the material America gave her we gave thousand of 6by6 two ton trucks to help carry your men and equipment. But the truth is if Germany wasn't fighting Russia when allies landed in Europe the allies would have never landed but if the same with Russia if Germany was only fighting Russia , Russia wouldn't have had a chance.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +22

      @@Superbowfin60 American aid only began arriving in substantial quantities in 1943, after Stalingrad. It mainly cconsisted of food, trucks, jeeps, and radio equipment. The USSR produced its own guns, tanks, planes, and other weapons, and it surpassed German production levels already in 1942.
      The Germans had about 160 divisions on the Eastern Front when the Allies landed in Normandy. The Germans had about 25 divisions in France and 15 in Italy. The Germans did NOT move large numbers of troops from the East to the Western fronts, because it would have led to the collapse of the German defenses there.
      The Red Armed Forces caused 80% f the combat casualties suffered by the Germans. The broke the back of the Wehrmacht, so that when the other Allies invaded Italy and France, the Germans were already suffering severe manpower shortages, This made the task of the Western Allies much easier, and saved many thousands of Allied lives, while the Soviets were losing millions of lives due to the barbaric behaviour of the Germans, the loss of vast territories for several years, and the need to draft all men of military age away from the home front and into the military.
      Americans like to believe that the Germans were doing just fine when the US and its allies changed that by invading Normandy. This is false. The USSR had just inflicted a gigantic defeat on the Germans in Operation Bagration, which destroyed Army Group Centre and forced the Germans back as far as Warsaw. This operation involved several million troops, thousands of tanks and aircraft, and over 10,000 guns, and it achieved complete surprise. The Soviets followed up with a massive attack in Ukraine, which drove the Germans back into Romania and Hungary, costing them the crucial oil fields of Ploesti, Romania, and causing the Romanians to overthrow their fascist government and join the Allies,
      Meanwhile, the Americans were bogged down in Normandy's bocage region, only breaking out after weeks of fighting the modest German forces that faced them.
      The Normandy invasion was on June 6, 1944. It took two and half months for the Allies to liberate Paris, about 200 km away from the landing zones. Gen. Patton's army "raced" across France, reaching the Verdun/Metz area in mid September, where it was stopped by the Germans.
      Patton decided to lay siege to Metz, instead of bypassing it and forging ahead into Germany. The siege, which Patton had said would last 10 days, in fact lasted three months. This siege was a mistake that cost many lives and was of little strategic value. Patton ignored Gen. Bradley, who urged him to stop "pecking at" the Metz fortress and move on ahead towards Germany, but the siege had become "personal" for Patton.
      Despite Patton's bombastic posturing, he fell into a German trap. The German stand at Metz it easier for the Germans to mount the Ardennes Campaign, the "Battle of the Bulge", since it pinned down the 3rd Army outside the region the Germans attacked. Only when US forces were besieged in Bastogne did Patton race north to relieve them.
      Meanwhile, Hitler kept the bulk of his forces in the East, in a desperate effort to hold back the Red Army.
      The Red Army was happy to receive millions of cans of Spam and other foods; happy to receive hundreds of thousands of Jeeps and trucks, and happy to see the Western Allies finally fighting the Germans in northern Europe. But it knew that Spam and Jeeps do not guarantee victory. That depends on the soldiers and their weapons, and generals who know how to win.

    • @Superbowfin60
      @Superbowfin60 3 года назад +4

      @@leezaslofsky4438 Russia definitely had to fight for their lives almost 30 million dead 20 million civilians 10 million soldiers
      Germany lost 6.5 million 6 million soldiers and 500 thousand civilians it's hard to imagine that much death how many people did the nazi's kill during ww2 counting all countries ? if you do the math they actually came out pretty good even after loosing. by the numbers it would seem like they won if how many people died was the deciding factor. Those germans were racking up death numbers like a pinball machine one thing we should all learn from ww2 Russians won't quite fighting no matter how many get mowed down, I don't think any country in the world would have kept fighting after so many casualties .

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 2 года назад +19

      @Lee Zaslofsky russoid copium

  • @peaceonearth351
    @peaceonearth351 10 месяцев назад +10

    From what I've read, Patton was in an automobile accident that broke his neck and he was severely paralyzed. He lived a couple days and he, himself wanted the medical staff to pull the plug on the ventilator that was keeping him alive. Being a General, he knew that he was doomed because in 1945 they didn't know how to fix the spine. Shortly later a Doctor brought in a new surgery to fuse the spine and that's why we see paraplegics and quadriplegics today. Before the war, a spinal cord injury was untreatable and a death sentence.

  • @michamuller
    @michamuller Год назад +87

    It is a honour that the grave of this man is in my country. Every where in my country you will find memorials
    for this man.
    We will never forget that him and his soldiers have liberate our country.
    Greetings from Luxembourg

  • @henrikg1388
    @henrikg1388 3 года назад +628

    This is actually one of the few conspiracy theories I believe is true. Among other facts, he nearly avoided another car crash in the same day. He also told his wife at the field hospital: "Get me out of here or they will kill me.". It's pure Occam.

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +31

      He never said there was a conspiracy to kill him. He wanted his wife to speed up his transfer to the US, where he would get better treatment.
      You do him an injustice by trying to use him to push your weird conspiracy theories.

    • @michaelmcgregor7374
      @michaelmcgregor7374 3 года назад +3

      @@leezaslofsky4438 People want to claim that the Israelis were behind his death, but they were not - this is pure NAZI BS!!!

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +5

      @@michaelmcgregor7374 Most of the people commenting on this video are pro-Nazis. They think Patton was one of them.

    • @charlesborders2893
      @charlesborders2893 3 года назад +12

      @@michaelmcgregor7374 TO HELL YOU SAY YOU KNOW NOTHING

    • @leezaslofsky4438
      @leezaslofsky4438 3 года назад +3

      @Zardozisgood Are you Jewish? You speak Yiddish, so you must be. I respect that, but I am not Jewish myself and I don't understand Yiddish.

  • @haldiraser
    @haldiraser 3 года назад +411

    "We have defeated the wrong Enemy."

    • @hamdankhan319
      @hamdankhan319 3 года назад +57

      It was the daaammmnnn small hats

    • @coolbreeze2.0-mortemadfasc13
      @coolbreeze2.0-mortemadfasc13 3 года назад +18

      Shows you that he was a fascist just like the Nazis. He was no hero, he was a Nazi-sympathizer.

    • @iamjsams755
      @iamjsams755 3 года назад +104

      @@coolbreeze2.0-mortemadfasc13 ok little hat.

    • @benjiblake2272
      @benjiblake2272 3 года назад +61

      @@coolbreeze2.0-mortemadfasc13 little hat, big nose, no real heart.

    • @valeriegriner5644
      @valeriegriner5644 3 года назад +4

      @@hamdankhan319 Yes...and I KNOW who they are!

  • @michaelg.1786
    @michaelg.1786 7 месяцев назад +11

    The military and political establishment wanted him gone. Sadly, this establishment is still present today in the U.S. Patton was a winner in total war no matter the costs.

  • @SK22000
    @SK22000 2 года назад +291

    I would love to hear what a forensic pathologist would have to say about Patton’s injuries

    • @20alphabet
      @20alphabet 2 года назад +31

      Lol, me too! If his body was ever exhumed and and autopsy done, this video would undoubtedly be removed by the creator.

    • @bullterror5
      @bullterror5 2 года назад +4

      They would have killed him because he owned a Bull Terrier...
      "Those Dogs just don't let go!" - Why would they when they have such a good GRIP?

    • @astralclub5964
      @astralclub5964 2 года назад +55

      Patton was right about quite a lot!

    • @tonypepperoni3679
      @tonypepperoni3679 2 года назад +24

      @@astralclub5964 Patton was based AF!

    • @shellyskiles9520
      @shellyskiles9520 2 года назад +11

      Poisoning is what I heard

  • @Hamlet-wp2ri
    @Hamlet-wp2ri 3 года назад +66

    “Wars may be fought with weapons, but they are won by men. It is the spirit of men who follow and of the man who leads that gains the victory.” George S. Patton Jr.

    • @_Dovar_
      @_Dovar_ 2 года назад +2

      Technology: Military Science
      Unlocked World Wonders: Brandenburg Gate
      Unlocked Building: Military Academy
      Unlocked Unit: Cavalry

    • @rubiconnn
      @rubiconnn 2 года назад +1

      "I'm more important and valiant than the men who fought on the front line and those that died are fools." -Patton.

    • @patricialmt5272
      @patricialmt5272 2 года назад

      We need to stop the feminization of men .

  • @philoman699
    @philoman699 3 года назад +222

    Patton..interesting character kinda a “if there’s a will , there’s a way” guy

    • @joshuagibson2520
      @joshuagibson2520 3 года назад +8

      Yes, and he wasn't a pu$$y.

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 3 года назад +3

      And "if there's not a way, there's no will"

    • @gregoryemmanuel9168
      @gregoryemmanuel9168 3 года назад +3

      And an egomaniac to boot.

    • @joshuagibson2520
      @joshuagibson2520 3 года назад

      @@gregoryemmanuel9168 no one can dispute that.

    • @lostinspace013
      @lostinspace013 3 года назад +11

      You wouldn't want to be a soldier in his army. He walked to HIS success over the dead bodies of his soldiers.

  • @andymckane7271
    @andymckane7271 10 месяцев назад

    Interesting analysis and commentary on one of history's greatest generals. Thank you very much for examining the alleged conspiracy behind Patton's death carefully and intelligently. I've never made a study of General Patton's death or even an in-depth study of Patton's life and career. That having been said, he's long been my favorite U.S. Army combat commander of the Second World War. Great job with putting this objective and open-minded video together! Andy McKane, 10 February 2024, Maunaloa, Hawaii.