I hate to see it stifled as well. I do not personally believe that folks posted photos of the era in which we fly our planes in-game to hurt anyone's feelings or intentionally offend anyone. Discussing past history is just that, in and of itself, and is most decidedly not political. Some symbols cannot be avoided, but if they are in a context of learning something, then it's not intended to offend. These things all tend to work themselves out over time anyway.
Learning history is one of THE most stuck-in-the-corner school subjects in American schools that we have, and that's very sad. Many of the younger folks have absolutely ZERO teaching of WWI, WWII, Korea, The Cold War, Vietnam, or even the First Gulf War. The school that my daughters graduated from--history class left off at Teddy Roosevelt's presidency. Not one single item of recent history was taught.
I, like vonmessa, I have been to Germany and enjoyed every second of it. It was sad to see that the vast majority of an entire male generation was gone. It was awesome to see so many friendly and outgoing folks wanting to try out their English--no matter how limited, and how well they forgave my poor German
I have no family or ancestors from there, I just wanted to go (and not put 3 years of high school German to waste) so I sold my motorcycle and booked a round trip for three weeks. The folks there were awesome
Sadly, many of the younger members of our board may only get some issues of life back then by what they read here--so we need to be truthful as well as hyper-accurate. Even Wiki has some innacuracies.
One GREAT book is "Hitler's Wartime Picture Magazine: Signal" S. L. Mayer (Prentice-Hall). It is chocked full of excellent photos and shows life on the front as well as life on the home front (ration cards, entertainment, and actual adverts from back then). The articles and photos were edited by Goerbles and his personal staff--so take them as they are keeping that in mind.
Also, there is no better researched book available on the Invasion of the Soviet Union than Paul Carell's "Unternehmen Barbarossa im Bild" (Undertaking Barbarossa in Pictures) Verlag Ullstein, 1967. It's in German, but even someone with a good grasp of military vocabulary and a couple of years of German can easily follow along. I payed 25 marks for my hard cover edition back in 1979, but may be gotten on ebay for less. It has many before then ever published photos that came straight from the family collections of veterans who were there.
I hope that especially the younger folks will take advantage of their free local libraries and spend some time in the history section. They'd be surprised all that they have missed at school.
ROX