This is really low IQ stuff. Uncle Adolf was interested in making war with the USSR not fighting Britain. Germany was a land power but had no answer to British sea power or its globe spanning empire and control of almost all of the worlds major shipping lanes and choke points. The Germans would never have been in a position to challenge Britain's naval power. It was much better for both sides to deal. Germany would have defeated the USSR and rid the world of cancerous Judeo-Bolshevism but probably spent decades trying to digest the lands they had captured and deal with the various new strategic headaches dominating a chunk of Eurasia would have left them with.
Meanwhile both sides probably would have found a balance of power. Its almost certain Britain would have detonated its own atom bomb before the Germans and had jet bombers capable of delivering it. German jet engines were inferior to what Rolls Royce was building and the German bomb project was a joke. With Germany and Britain the dominant powers in Europe we would have had to come to some kind of arrangement where the thought of war was unthinkable like it was between Britain and the United States.
This is really low IQ stuff. Uncle Adolf was interested in making war with the USSR not fighting Britain.
To be fair, it was both. At least if you believe him, he wanted peace in Europe. At one point he thought Britain was was a threat, but wanted to get along with them, and at other points he thought Russia was a rising threat to Europe. He flipflopped or adjusted based on what he saw but, based on the time, he saw both of them as threats and, again, based on time, thought peace or fighting was the best way to combat that threat.
It's not as simple as Dom tries to make it out, but it's also not as simple as "Hitler wanted peace." He, again if you take him at his word, wanted the best for Europe, but his means for doing that changed a few times, and sometimes absolutely involved war. He's not as warmongery as History™ makes him out to be, as far as I can tell, but he was also obviously no peacemaker.
This is really low IQ stuff. Uncle Adolf was interested in making war with the USSR not fighting Britain. Germany was a land power but had no answer to British sea power or its globe spanning empire and control of almost all of the worlds major shipping lanes and choke points. The Germans would never have been in a position to challenge Britain's naval power. It was much better for both sides to deal. Germany would have defeated the USSR and rid the world of cancerous Judeo-Bolshevism but probably spent decades trying to digest the lands they had captured and deal with the various new strategic headaches dominating a chunk of Eurasia would have left them with.
Meanwhile both sides probably would have found a balance of power. Its almost certain Britain would have detonated its own atom bomb before the Germans and had jet bombers capable of delivering it. German jet engines were inferior to what Rolls Royce was building and the German bomb project was a joke. With Germany and Britain the dominant powers in Europe we would have had to come to some kind of arrangement where the thought of war was unthinkable like it was between Britain and the United States.
To be fair, it was both. At least if you believe him, he wanted peace in Europe. At one point he thought Britain was was a threat, but wanted to get along with them, and at other points he thought Russia was a rising threat to Europe. He flipflopped or adjusted based on what he saw but, based on the time, he saw both of them as threats and, again, based on time, thought peace or fighting was the best way to combat that threat.
It's not as simple as Dom tries to make it out, but it's also not as simple as "Hitler wanted peace." He, again if you take him at his word, wanted the best for Europe, but his means for doing that changed a few times, and sometimes absolutely involved war. He's not as warmongery as History™ makes him out to be, as far as I can tell, but he was also obviously no peacemaker.
I blame the meth. Paranoia is a symptom of withdrawal.