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by nineplay 1607 days ago
I find them surprisingly chilling and not just the ones taken at the concentration camp. The US troops preparing for D-Day, the bombs lined up on the battleship. The solder writing the name of his fallen friend on a bomb. The flamethrower, firing at an empty field but how long before Soviet solders are on the other end?

Death hangs like a cloud over these photos. I wonder how many of the subjects made it through the war alive.

2 comments

> I wonder how many of the subjects made it through the war alive.

Those D-Day soldiers, especially.

WWII photos are among most harrowing and iconic images in human history.

The technology is right on the line between old and modern. You can easily imagine yourself there with the tinny radios and the smell oil and grease. The planes and ships look scrappy, like they could easily be blown apart. Cranked out in volume to overpower the enemy, or at least have a few survive.

And then there's the suffering of people in the concentration camps, people who've had their cities bombed. Their faces tell you everything.

The sense of foreboding is palpable.

Unrelatedly was watching videos of Syria, and people there also have chill attitudes even though many parts of their cities are destroyed. War time is strange.
I went to a war simulation once--we played airsoft as "civilians" in a town where we stayed in open-air shacks, and "Russian" forces fought "NATO" forces with a mixture of airsoft and real blank fire. (Plenty of real combat veterans in "NATO" and "RUSFOR", but the "civilians" were mostly LARPers with a few veterans.

It was astonishing how quickly we reached a state of "bored adrenaline". By the second day, we were preparing our breakfast and not even looking outside when we heard (real) gunfire or airsoft pellets striking our shack. I remember sitting down, very tired and bored, thinking about nothing, but my hands still trembling from the adrenaline.

The ways that I naturally felt like moving (I think I'll lean on the wall of this shack for a while and watch the street, I think I'll lean against the wall and keep a hand on my gun) I eventually realized were the same poses I've seen civilians take in pictures of war zones.

Wow, I had no idea something like that exists. Happen to have a link to the one you did? I'd be really interested in trying something like that.
Milsim West Saratov Insurgency. It's very interesting. Half meme kids yelling at each other, half very interesting fake firefights.
Search for something like "milsim <your geographical area>"
> even though many parts of their cities are destroyed

That is, perhaps, the hedonic treadmill [1].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedonic_treadmill

Never considered that treadmill goes down as well as up!

What a privilege to live in a stable part of the world!

> What a privilege to live in a stable part of the world!

It's no privilege: if these pictures show us one thing is that it was a hard earned right. These men paid the price. Freedom is never granted, it is earned.