Oh boy, as a native German I have to say: That auto translation was something else! At the end of the video I was literally on the floor laughing, because of the weird translations, like when this operator said "I'm the infiltrator" and it got translated to "I'm the dictator" xD Anyways, great video! You actually did a really good job at understanding what was actually going on, despite the bad translation! Keep em coming!
Another interesting Bundeswehr Video i'd recommend (with German Subtitles, which youtube can autotranslate to english surprisingly well) is "Feldjäger testen Virtual Reality für Häuserkampf" - Military Police test Virtual Reality for Urban Warfare ua-cam.com/video/m3JOjHmaBSA/v-deo.html
Especially in the Bundeswehr in the north. You can salute someone with a long text or just use "Moin". "Moin Moin" to my understanding is not directly a greeting but an invitation to a "Klönschnack" a short talk.
@@SpookyFox1000 as Long as he isn’t 90 or older i‘am pretty shure he is innocent, but how am I to tell as a 32 year old German. Just a quick reminder what about your country looking at the last 30 years…
"Moin Moin" is the typical greet in the northern state of germany literally from Wilhellmshaven over Bremen to Hamburg and everything from there to the northern border to Denmark. you can say it either as single " Moin " or double " Moin Moin " it is basically the same as in the states with " Hi "
But "Moin, moin" is too much of talking. Then you are a "Sabbelhannes." 😂 "Moin" is enougth. 😁 And moin is, like the forewriters says, a thing in the nothern gearmany. In the middle or south, you will be the strange guy. 😅
"Moin Moin" is also a regional northern thing... In my native region, where aren't as talkative / Sir talksalot / sir nevershutsup... A single "Moin" Is beyond enough ;-D
I think it's interesting to see the different point of views based on the nation. From the tone of commentator the US troops are more about "cleaning" the ship like in a war like scenario (neutralizing the threat), while the germans boarding teams are working more like police forces (securing, investigation and documentation).
"Moin moin!" is a Hamburg thing - maybe Kiel a little bit, too? Northern coastal towns either way. Most northern Germans will just stick to one "Moin". We are rumored to be saying: More than one "moin" is just rambling!
Nice video. Once upon a time, there was an SMG aiming technique, where one would point at the target with their index finger and pull the trigger with their middle finger. The idea behind it is that the human brain is well adapted in guiding the hands to point at things, so at short ranges is faster to point at a target with the index finger and pull the trigger with the middle finger, with no need to take aim through the gun sights. Maybe you could make a video testing this.
@@CombatArmsChannel 4 any full Rural/Universal Camouflage Pattern Outfits/Uniforms ya get that're never U.S. Military Issued as a bit more variety here's a couple minimumlistic Solid Color Accessory options that I highly recommend 4 ya 2 choose from sure it's important 2 follow the 5 s's of Camouflage/Concealment but at the same time it's also just as important 2 cover as many/much Colors on the Pattern as possible/if possible cover all colors of the Pattern depending on Color Scheme of Pattern itself! Adaptive Green (RAL 6008 Brown Green or RAL 8000 Green Brown: kinda/sorta mixture of Coyote & Grassy Olive Drab Wilderness Green which covers Brown & Grassy Green all at 1nce/the same time) from Helikon-Tex combined with Solid Color Black/Solid Color Foliage like/Wolf like Gray/Grey or RAL 7013 (Brown Grey/Solution Dyed Ranger Green/Stone Grey Olive which covers Browns & Grays/Greys all at 1nce/the same time) combined with Regular Olive Drab Wilderness Green!
moin is a typical northern german greeting, means "morning" but is used any time of the day. using it twice is also typical in some regions, moin moin.
4:32 he said moin moin. It's a greating often used in north germany. If you want something even shorter for example when passing by someone you can also just use moin
That's not what a red dot is, though. What you are pointing out are weapon lasers to shine a visible aiming point at a target. A "red dot" device however is a small optical sight without magnification that projects a holographic red dot into the shooters line of sight. The red dot of a "red dot" device is visible only to the shooter, while a weapon laser is visible to anybody.
Moin moin is northern German dialekt for good morning, good day, good evening. If we northerners are concerned we say "Oha". If we are realy concerned we say : "Ohaohaoha!" If we panic we say:" Ohahohaohaohaohaohaohaohaohaaaaaa!" And we have a dry humor.
'moin moin' is like: hello :) A lot is said in the north of Germany. This battalion is in Eckernförde, which is in the north of Germany. In the south they say 'servus'
He said Moin Moin. In the german North you say Moin as a Form of Hello. Some say Moin Moin but some ( most older Persons) call it Gesabbel, what means Moin Moin is allready to much talking. But its to see on a funny way. :D
Moin moin means just " Good Morning" to german people. Nothing to worry about, Dude.😂 Moin, can be said in the morning, during midday, in evening and even at night. Its just a friendly "Moin".
Fängst du nicht erst als 76er an, machst all die Ausbildung durch und dann qualifizierst du dich? Meines Wissens nach, kannst du nicht direkt einem Boarding Team zustoßen
Moin, Moin! It's a north german slang to say: "Guten Tag" (good day to you) You can say that at any daytime, though "Moin" is related to "Morning" I hope that helps the understanding 😉 Greetings!
I dunno, I can understand not wanting a dot in the MP5 on a ship. Keeps your vision unobscured and with training, which I'm sure these get enough of, and the use of flashlight and/or laser I don't see an issue with it.
Moin, Moin= Ortsüblicher Dialekt und bedeutet nichts anderes wie "guten Morgen" = Good Morning. In Deutschland, wie auch in allen anderen Ländern der Welt, gibt es viele Dialekte daher kann die Begrüßung oder auch Verabschiedung Verbal etwas unterschiedlich sein.
you making your thumbnail with a red bar around the edges of the Thumbnail.. sometimes it confuses me to a point where i dont know if i did watches a video of yours allready :-)
I wonder, and want to ask the vets, since NATO troops are trained to fight together, how similar is the training? Assuming for example an experienced US marine gets lost and gets caught up by a German team. Could the marine fight with the German team effectively since the training is equally? Or is the training that different that it is not compatible at all? How close are the NATO trainings to each other?
What are you talking about? The ongoing genocide of the german people? International military tribunal charter Article 19. The Tribunal shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence. It shall adopt and apply to the greatest possible extent expeditious and nontechnical procedure, and shall admit any evidence which it deems to be of probative value. Article 20. The Tribunal may require to be informed of the nature of any evidence before it is entered so that it may rule upon the relevance thereof. Article 21. The Tribunal shall not require proof of facts of common knowledge but shall take judicial notice thereof. It shall also take judicial notice of official governmental documents and reports of the United Nations, including the acts and documents of the committees set up in the various allied countries for the investigation of war crimes, and of records and findings of military or other Tribunals of any of the United Nations. It`s from the nuremberg and other trials. German guilt for Katyn has been established there in court and to my understanding has never been in front of a court since then (apart from a trial in Leningrad where supposedly a german officer confessed but i haven`t seen the transcripts). No matter what the polish, russian and other goverments say now about this incident. To my understanding you still risk jail in france if you say that the sowjets and not the germans did it. It`s the Gayssot law. It`s named after a guy of the french communist party and it was enacted at about the same time that things about Katyn got public because of Gorbachev / about the time he gave documents on it to the polish goverment. Also to my understanding you still risk legal trouble and even jail in germany and other countries for saying the exact same things that Yad Vashem in Israel and the USholocaustmuseum say, because they say things that differ for which germans were tried, found guilty and executed or imprisoned at this trials. This combined with people who took part in it and their track reckord (e.g. judges) as well as critics at that time (the Chief Justice of the US surpreme court at that time, Harlan Fisk Stone spoke out against it). You might be interested in the following books: Niccolo Machiavelli: The Prince (1532) Gustave Le Bon: Psychology of the Masses (1895) Vladimir Lenin: What to be done Lenin (1902) WALTER LIPPMANN: PUBLIC OPINION (1921) Edward Bernays: Crystallizing Public Opinion (1923) Edward Bernays: Propaganda (1928) Theodore N. Kaufman: Germany must perish (1941) Earnest Hooton: Hooton Plan (1943) Louis Nizer: What to do with germany (1944) Jacques Ellul: Propaganda: The formation of mans attitudes (1965/1973) Dr. Michael F. Connors: Dealing in Hate. The Development of Anti-German Propaganda. (1966, 1979, 1996) As for the ww2 UK propagandist look for Sefton Delmer As for ww2 sowjet propagandists look for Ilya Ehrenburg and Vasily Grossman. As for ww2 US propaganda look for Edward Bernays, Walter Lippmann, Theodore Kaufman, Earnest Hooton and Louis Nizer. You can throw Billy Wilder and the movie he made about Buchenwald while working for the US psychological warfare division in there too. The same with Alfred Hitchcock`s film/documentary. There are also voices, who say that Steven Spielberg is pretty much the same as Wilder. That includes jewish voices like Dr. Roger Dommergue Polacco de Menasce (who wrote a open letter to Spielberg). Someone even made a video answer/documentary to his movie Schindlers List that analised this movie. I can`t say if the statements made there are true or not. All i can say is that it`s out there.
Oh boy, as a native German I have to say: That auto translation was something else! At the end of the video I was literally on the floor laughing, because of the weird translations, like when this operator said "I'm the infiltrator" and it got translated to "I'm the dictator" xD
Anyways, great video! You actually did a really good job at understanding what was actually going on, despite the bad translation! Keep em coming!
You’re lucky anyone allows you a military !
Any shame ?
@@SpookyFox1000 NATO forced us, so if you're not a Russian bot, kindly ask your own government about it.
@@SpookyFox1000 why should he be ashamed. There is almost no chance that he was in any way involved in what the nazi regime did.
@@SpookyFox1000 What is your problem?
4:21 Moin Moin or simply Moin is a common greeting phrase in Northern Germany and especially Hamburg.
Another interesting Bundeswehr Video i'd recommend (with German Subtitles, which youtube can autotranslate to english surprisingly well) is "Feldjäger testen Virtual Reality für Häuserkampf" - Military Police test Virtual Reality for Urban Warfare ua-cam.com/video/m3JOjHmaBSA/v-deo.html
Especially in the Bundeswehr in the north. You can salute someone with a long text or just use "Moin".
"Moin Moin" to my understanding is not directly a greeting but an invitation to a "Klönschnack" a short talk.
afaik "moin, moin" is a greeting phrase for people one knows well, like friends and family. While just a single "moin" is used to greet strangers.
Well i'm from Rheinland-Pfalz and we use it too
"Moin moin" is common for Hamburg. Moin is a common greeting all over northern Germany.
Always love your reactions to my country 🇩🇪. Nice video as always
Any embarrassment about what you did ?…….
Glad your country is strengthening its military
@@SpookyFox1000 what he did? wtf
@@SpookyFox1000 what did he do
@@SpookyFox1000 as Long as he isn’t 90 or older i‘am pretty shure he is innocent, but how am I to tell as a 32 year old German. Just a quick reminder what about your country looking at the last 30 years…
Being in that unit is excatly what I enlistet for.
Glad you made a great reaction to it
"Moin Moin" is the typical greet in the northern state of germany literally from Wilhellmshaven over Bremen to Hamburg and everything from there to the northern border to Denmark. you can say it either as single " Moin " or double " Moin Moin " it is basically the same as in the states with " Hi "
Moin moin, is mostly used as the greet in a group or if you have something to tell and need attention. Prost, Kameraden.
But "Moin, moin" is too much of talking. Then you are a "Sabbelhannes." 😂 "Moin" is enougth. 😁 And moin is, like the forewriters says, a thing in the nothern gearmany. In the middle or south, you will be the strange guy. 😅
Not called welhelmshaven enymore
The seebattalion is everything we have in terms of boarding teams marines and seals (each in different companies of course)
"Moin Moin" is also a regional northern thing... In my native region, where aren't as talkative / Sir talksalot / sir nevershutsup... A single "Moin" Is beyond enough ;-D
Moin moin ist Gesabbel! :D
Their Sea-Q-B skills are great! Anyone? No?
No ! You lot shouldn’t be allowed weapons ! Why hasn’t the world learnt it’s lesson ? !
@@SpookyFox1000 troll somewhere else
I think it's interesting to see the different point of views based on the nation.
From the tone of commentator the US troops are more about "cleaning" the ship like in a war like scenario (neutralizing the threat), while the germans boarding teams are working more like police forces (securing, investigation and documentation).
"Moin moin!" is a Hamburg thing - maybe Kiel a little bit, too? Northern coastal towns either way. Most northern Germans will just stick to one "Moin". We are rumored to be saying: More than one "moin" is just rambling!
Nice video.
Once upon a time, there was an SMG aiming technique, where one would point at the target with their index finger and pull the trigger with their middle finger. The idea behind it is that the human brain is well adapted in guiding the hands to point at things, so at short ranges is faster to point at a target with the index finger and pull the trigger with the middle finger, with no need to take aim through the gun sights.
Maybe you could make a video testing this.
I think with the Laser is this obsolet
Yeah we still use point shooting today. Usually for the first shots at a close range. Then you acquire sights after those first quick shots
I wouldn’t ever allow Germans weapons ! You are nuts !
@@CombatArmsChannel 4 any full Rural/Universal Camouflage Pattern Outfits/Uniforms ya get that're never U.S. Military Issued as a bit more variety here's a couple minimumlistic Solid Color Accessory options that I highly recommend 4 ya 2 choose from sure it's important 2 follow the 5 s's of Camouflage/Concealment but at the same time it's also just as important 2 cover as many/much Colors on the Pattern as possible/if possible cover all colors of the Pattern depending on Color Scheme of Pattern itself! Adaptive Green (RAL 6008 Brown Green or RAL 8000 Green Brown: kinda/sorta mixture of Coyote & Grassy Olive Drab Wilderness Green which covers Brown & Grassy Green all at 1nce/the same time) from Helikon-Tex combined with Solid Color Black/Solid Color Foliage like/Wolf like Gray/Grey or RAL 7013 (Brown Grey/Solution Dyed Ranger Green/Stone Grey Olive which covers Browns & Grays/Greys all at 1nce/the same time) combined with Regular Olive Drab Wilderness Green!
He made 24 mins out of 9, explained, compared, etc. Reaction content done right.
moin is a typical northern german greeting, means "morning" but is used any time of the day. using it twice is also typical in some regions, moin moin.
4:32 he said moin moin. It's a greating often used in north germany. If you want something even shorter for example when passing by someone you can also just use moin
Moin Moin is to be understood in Northern Germany as a very friendly greeting (Hello, Nice You are Here) Moin is normal Hello
LOVE the ‘Discreet Chaos’ clothing brother! Thanks for the rep 🙏🏽 big love from your brother across the pond 🤙🏼
Moin, moin! .... is already very chatty to talkative 🤣 this one says maximum: "moin" = hi! 😂
''Moin moin'' is how we greet each other in northern Germany. But usually we only say moin one time... Moin moin is more of a Hamburg thing
The mp5‘s in the beginning had red dots, they were mounted below
That's not what a red dot is, though. What you are pointing out are weapon lasers to shine a visible aiming point at a target. A "red dot" device however is a small optical sight without magnification that projects a holographic red dot into the shooters line of sight. The red dot of a "red dot" device is visible only to the shooter, while a weapon laser is visible to anybody.
Moin Moin is northern german dialect. "Morgen, Morgen" -> literally "Morning Morning" but used 24/7
Thats the moment if you know them from sister platoon xD and you know exactly they show nearly 33% of theyr equippment xDDDDDDDDDDDDDD loving it
"dictator is the most important part of the team" XD
I'm German and Canadian, so I'm bilingual. I'm laughing my ass off over these translations.
Moin moin is northern German dialekt for good morning, good day, good evening. If we northerners are concerned we say "Oha". If we are realy concerned we say : "Ohaohaoha!" If we panic we say:" Ohahohaohaohaohaohaohaohaohaaaaaa!" And we have a dry humor.
MoinMoin means hello in Sea area in Germany
"MOIN, MOIN" ist norther german slang. Its like Good Morning :) In south is it "SERVUS" and in west ist ist "TACH"
'moin moin' is like: hello :) A lot is said in the north of Germany. This battalion is in Eckernförde, which is in the north of Germany. In the south they say 'servus'
And in the west : east you said : hello 😅
He said Moin Moin. In the german North you say Moin as a Form of Hello. Some say Moin Moin but some ( most older Persons) call it Gesabbel, what means Moin Moin is allready to much talking. But its to see on a funny way. :D
Die See/the sea. Der See/ the lake. Entern/ to board.
Moin means "guten Morgen"! In Germany...so they say hallo in the north..!!!
There is something in boarding teams of navies I can't describe.
Good video. Please more about the German Bundeswehr
Moin moin means just " Good Morning" to german people. Nothing to worry about, Dude.😂 Moin, can be said in the morning, during midday, in evening and even at night. Its just a friendly "Moin".
Startin in the german boarding team in January :D
Fängst du nicht erst als 76er an, machst all die Ausbildung durch und dann qualifizierst du dich? Meines Wissens nach, kannst du nicht direkt einem Boarding Team zustoßen
You're supposed to help me not f#ck people up lol 🤣🤣🤣😂
Moin Moin is correct - In Finland they are saying Moi
"Moin, Moin" is the northern slang for "Guten Morgen" (good morning) ;-)
Moin, Moin!
It's a north german slang to say: "Guten Tag" (good day to you)
You can say that at any daytime, though "Moin" is related to "Morning"
I hope that helps the understanding 😉
Greetings!
moin moin is colloquial for good day...good morning
Moin moin is a birth German greeting like hello.
Basically “mornin’ mornin’”
The etymology of moin is unclear but it´s mostly be thought of a derivate of moi´n = (moi) beautiful.
@@J0hnd0367 Yeah, that. Those Southerners always ask me why I would greet them with a Moin after midday.
"Moin" has nothing to do with "morgen"
"Moin, moin" is normal in northern Germany to greet.
I dunno, I can understand not wanting a dot in the MP5 on a ship. Keeps your vision unobscured and with training, which I'm sure these get enough of, and the use of flashlight and/or laser I don't see an issue with it.
It also does have a LAM installed, means they can just turn the laser on and aim that way
No moin moin is actually borth german. Normaly they say just moin, everything more means you talk to mutch
76er
moin moin is in north germany common for good morning or hi nice to meet you
Hi , another great video 👍 Have you done a reaction to the SAS battle of Mirbat ?
'Moin Moin' is a northern German greeting.
Mooooiiiiiin!
Moin, Moin= Ortsüblicher Dialekt und bedeutet nichts anderes wie "guten Morgen" = Good Morning. In Deutschland, wie auch in allen anderen Ländern der Welt, gibt es viele Dialekte daher kann die Begrüßung oder auch Verabschiedung Verbal etwas unterschiedlich sein.
Appreciate your videos as always. Have you seen the WW2 Battle of the Reichstag by Operations Room?
Moin moin is hello in North germany
5:05 - I dare to disagree with the comment "They seem to be very simple". From my point of view nothing of that seems to be simple - at all.
you making your thumbnail with a red bar around the edges of the Thumbnail.. sometimes it confuses me to a point where i dont know if i did watches a video of yours allready :-)
Untertitel aus der Hölle
Who made the sub text? Some wrong stuff.
I wonder, and want to ask the vets, since NATO troops are trained to fight together, how similar is the training? Assuming for example an experienced US marine gets lost and gets caught up by a German team. Could the marine fight with the German team effectively since the training is equally? Or is the training that different that it is not compatible at all? How close are the NATO trainings to each other?
There's probably enough overlap to make it work, given good communication
Meister moin is n norddeutsches ding (sir its an northern german thing)
Can you do a Israeli k9 video?
The automatic translation ist real bad. 😂
moin moin = hello
-76-
Do we actually allow Germans guns ? After what happened…..twice !
how are you allowed to the internet, when you only waste your time propagating some bullshit
Of course!
What are you talking about? The ongoing genocide of the german people?
International military tribunal charter
Article 19.
The Tribunal shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence. It shall adopt and apply to the greatest possible extent expeditious and nontechnical procedure, and shall admit any evidence which it deems to be of probative value.
Article 20.
The Tribunal may require to be informed of the nature of any evidence before it is entered so that it may rule upon the relevance thereof.
Article 21.
The Tribunal shall not require proof of facts of common knowledge but shall take judicial notice thereof. It shall also take judicial notice of official governmental documents and reports of the United Nations, including the acts and documents of the committees set up in the various allied countries for the investigation of war crimes, and of records and findings of military or other Tribunals of any of the United Nations.
It`s from the nuremberg and other trials. German guilt for Katyn has been established there in court and to my understanding has never been in front of a court since then (apart from a trial in Leningrad where supposedly a german officer confessed but i haven`t seen the transcripts). No matter what the polish, russian and other goverments say now about this incident.
To my understanding you still risk jail in france if you say that the sowjets and not the germans did it. It`s the Gayssot law. It`s named after a guy of the french communist party and it was enacted at about the same time that things about Katyn got public because of Gorbachev / about the time he gave documents on it to the polish goverment.
Also to my understanding you still risk legal trouble and even jail in germany and other countries for saying the exact same things that Yad Vashem in Israel and the USholocaustmuseum say, because they say things that differ for which germans were tried, found guilty and executed or imprisoned at this trials.
This combined with people who took part in it and their track reckord (e.g. judges) as well as critics at that time (the Chief Justice of the US surpreme court at that time, Harlan Fisk Stone spoke out against it).
You might be interested in the following books:
Niccolo Machiavelli: The Prince (1532)
Gustave Le Bon: Psychology of the Masses (1895)
Vladimir Lenin: What to be done Lenin (1902)
WALTER LIPPMANN: PUBLIC OPINION (1921)
Edward Bernays: Crystallizing Public Opinion (1923)
Edward Bernays: Propaganda (1928)
Theodore N. Kaufman: Germany must perish (1941)
Earnest Hooton: Hooton Plan (1943)
Louis Nizer: What to do with germany (1944)
Jacques Ellul: Propaganda: The formation of mans attitudes (1965/1973)
Dr. Michael F. Connors: Dealing in Hate. The Development of Anti-German Propaganda. (1966, 1979, 1996)
As for the ww2 UK propagandist look for Sefton Delmer
As for ww2 sowjet propagandists look for Ilya Ehrenburg and Vasily Grossman.
As for ww2 US propaganda look for Edward Bernays, Walter Lippmann, Theodore Kaufman, Earnest Hooton and Louis Nizer.
You can throw Billy Wilder and the movie he made about Buchenwald while working for the US psychological warfare division in there too. The same with Alfred Hitchcock`s film/documentary.
There are also voices, who say that Steven Spielberg is pretty much the same as Wilder. That includes jewish voices like Dr. Roger Dommergue Polacco de Menasce (who wrote a open letter to Spielberg). Someone even made a video answer/documentary to his movie Schindlers List that analised this movie. I can`t say if the statements made there are true or not. All i can say is that it`s out there.
@@mrd7067 you wrote that long one to me? What you mean
That's like saying: Should America have any guns after Vietnam, or the disastrous decision to invade Iraq for the illusive WMDs??????
Very disappointed that you are prepared to interact with the Germans ! Please let’s not forget !
How old are you?
Already gone to school, or do you still have that ahead of you?
You are a perfect example of an american stereotype the rest of the world has on the USA😂
@@itsjustcarina5326 I don't even think he is a regular American account. Sounds like a bot from the East.