- Joined
- 11 June 2014
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Yes agreed. I understand the cause of Dan’s posts (he is concerned about misinformation being taken as fact, something the world is increasingly concerned with) but this is not the right way to behave on this forum.
I apologise. My difficulty, as you say, is with speculative material posted as fact. The title of the thread refers to speculative drawings. The text posted above the drawings is not marked as speculative. But I hope, however painfully, I have at least made a case to show that the text is indeed speculative.
The study of German WW2 aircraft development has had a very bad name in recent years - far more so than any other area of 'secret projects' study. It had, as I've said, reached a point where it was becoming impossible to tell what material was grounded in historical evidence and what was purely speculative (i.e. fiction).
Having spent seven years studying German WW2 documents and having accumulated vast quantities of material on German WW2 'secret projects', I feel that I am in a position to finally 'set the record straight', sharing my knowledge and sources with forum members so that they can be better informed on the background and evidence for particular projects in this field.
This forum is a touchstone for those seeking to know more about 'secret projects' and it is galling to see misinformation, as mentioned above, being presented without caveat time and again where German WW2 'secret projects' are concerned.
The sensible thing for me to do would probably be to ignore it and let the misinformation creep out unopposed and unnoted - the path of least resistance. I tried this at first (and frankly, mustering the proper evidence to challenge every 'imaginative' assertion is very time consuming - when coming up with an 'imaginative' assertion takes only seconds), but it soon became clear that this same misinformation would then find its way onto Wikipedia, to video game forums, to Facebook and Twitter and elsewhere. In short, if misinformation goes unchallenged, large numbers of people who rely on historians and researchers (and published authors, whether or not they fall into either of those categories) for their information end up believing that the misinformation is fact.
So I can continue to challenge the misinformation as politely and impersonally as I can manage or I can simply allow this forum to become a root source of misinformation about German WW2 projects (or, option three, those who post said misinformation could stop posting it - or post it in the 'speculative' or 'user artwork' sections). I'm not sure which you would prefer.
NB.
* See attached 'Similar threads'. You will note three of the five 'similar threads' presented to me this morning are on the projects of Alexander Lippisch. Looking at those three threads, all contain speculative text and speculative drawings. None are marked as such. They have gone entirely unchallenged, having been posted at a time when I was attempting to ignore such misinformation. I would argue that all three should be in the 'speculative' or 'user artwork' sections.
* Also attached 'P 15'. Here my sternest critic from the thread above has read misinformation presented about Lippisch's P 15 and been impressed by it. "Your added commentary makes these latest offerings truly fascinating, thank you!" As I said, if misinformation presented as fact, without a 'speculative' tag, goes unchallenged, people end up believing it.
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