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notyou2 wrote:I love history. World history, Canadian history, all kinds of history no matter how old. But, I love WWII history the best.
I have read several accounts of specific unit histories (at the battalion level) in war. Some through more than one war. I have read Winston Churchill's letters to Roosevelt during WWII. That is a 4 volume set and very dry. I must be a glutton for punishment.
waauw wrote:I'm currently reading 'Dreadnought' from Robert K. Massie, about the naval arms race leading up to WWI.
waauw wrote:I'm currently reading 'Dreadnought' from Robert K. Massie, about the naval arms race leading up to WWI.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
DoomYoshi wrote:I actually have a pretty comprehensive study list. Every day, I read the international sections of a random scattering of newspapers, then any news about elections or air traffic control. I zone out for a bit and watch 2 tv shows (one about nerd culture, the other about combat sports). Then is targeted studying, based on the day of the week.
Monday: masonry study
Tuesday: employment specific
Wednesday: Philosophy/Western Canon
Thursday: Mathematics
Friday: Nobel prize winning stuff (either biographies about those that won, the original research and any extra research needed to understand it, or for the Lit or Peace Prizes, as much source as I can. But not the economics prize. I am willfully ignorant of their bullshit.)
Saturday: Constitutions of the World (mostly modern, but I study historical ones as well)
Sunday: the Bible
If I have time, I will check out some columnists, book reviews and essays.
2dimes wrote:Pilot stuff and music. Not nearly consistently enough.
waauw wrote:
I've heard the game 'flight simulator' is immensely realistic. Is that true?
khazalid wrote:i'll echo WWII history. if anyone has not seen 'the world at war', the entire documentary (all 60-odd hours of it) is freely available online. it is an astonishing piece of television; well worth your time.
DoomYoshi wrote:I actually have a pretty comprehensive study list. Every day, I read the international sections of a random scattering of newspapers, then any news about elections or air traffic control. I zone out for a bit and watch 2 tv shows (one about nerd culture, the other about combat sports). Then is targeted studying, based on the day of the week.
Monday: masonry study
Tuesday: employment specific
Wednesday: Philosophy/Western Canon
Thursday: Mathematics
Friday: Nobel prize winning stuff (either biographies about those that won, the original research and any extra research needed to understand it, or for the Lit or Peace Prizes, as much source as I can. But not the economics prize. I am willfully ignorant of their bullshit.)
Saturday: Constitutions of the World (mostly modern, but I study historical ones as well)
Sunday: the Bible
If I have time, I will check out some columnists, book reviews and essays.
nietzsche wrote:khazalid wrote:i'll echo WWII history. if anyone has not seen 'the world at war', the entire documentary (all 60-odd hours of it) is freely available online. it is an astonishing piece of television; well worth your time.
I started watching that documentary, but I started feeling kind of sad. I don't know, it's a depressive documentary. But yeah, it's very good, well narrated, lots of info.
I think I still have it in a hard disk somewhere
khazalid wrote:nietzsche wrote:khazalid wrote:i'll echo WWII history. if anyone has not seen 'the world at war', the entire documentary (all 60-odd hours of it) is freely available online. it is an astonishing piece of television; well worth your time.
I started watching that documentary, but I started feeling kind of sad. I don't know, it's a depressive documentary. But yeah, it's very good, well narrated, lots of info.
I think I still have it in a hard disk somewhere
it is depressing; but uplifting would probably not be the most appropriate tone. war is hell, as they say.
the 6 episodes on the invasion of the soviet union are particularly galling.
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