Status Updates From The Collapse of the Third R...
The Collapse of the Third Republic by
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Evan
is on page 600 of 1050
Really rolling along now. I'm finding this impossible to put down.
— 10 hours, 14 min ago
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Evan
is on page 484 of 1050
Sept. 1, 1939. World War II begins. Reading about it never gets old. Being reminded of how it happened is always important, The evil never went away, as we well know. This is a story of people who were not prepared. Are we?
— Feb 10, 2026 10:38PM
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Evan
is on page 400 of 1050
This is looking like a memorable one. Shirer really takes you into the trenches of epic history. What an incredible reporter he was.
— Feb 09, 2026 11:07PM
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Evan
is on page 271 of 1050
This is an extraordinary history, on the same level as Shirer's Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. So many political portents in this book that make it super timely. Big-ass winter read; let's get to page 1,000.
— Feb 08, 2026 06:15PM
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Evan
is on page 150 of 1050
This is proving to be more timely and relevant in many ways I hadn't anticipated. And damn, can Shirer write history. 1,000 pages let's go!
— Feb 01, 2026 09:09PM
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Mislav Kužić
is finished
Everyone in Vichy had come to terms with the fact that the Third Republic was over, and that a dictatorship with Pétain at the helm was better in the current situation. But he was only a figurehead, and this was recognized by the 80 deputies of the assembly who voted against the proposal to grant expanded powers and agree on a new Constitution. History has crowned their courageous gesture with eternal glory.
— Jan 31, 2026 01:07PM
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Mislav Kužić
is 98% done
The attack on the French fleet at Mers-el-Kébir was a logical sequence for Churchill because nobody is interested in keeping one's word when national interests are at stake, it is pure pragmatism. However, this also had negative consequences because society in France showed solidarity with the government in Vichy. Pierre Laval refused all attempts to maintain the third republic and began to dismantle it with ease.
— Jan 31, 2026 03:02AM
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Mislav Kužić
is 97% done
The government moved to Vichy and it quickly became clear that it would be an authoritarian creation that would lean completely on Nazi Germany. Pétain, Darlan and others expressed absolute contempt for democracy, the politicians of the Republic, almost all of whom were immediately arrested. The sentiment that the British had betrayed them reached its peak with the events of Operation Catapult.
— Jan 30, 2026 11:46AM
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Mislav Kužić
is 95% done
The members of the government only formally discussed certain clauses of the armistice in order to ostensibly preserve the honor of France for history. Everyone had had enough of the war and the public welcomed the armistice. Only de Gaulle and some generals in North Africa wanted to continue the fight, but they were pacified. More shameful for the French was the signing of the armistice with Italy.
— Jan 30, 2026 09:22AM
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Mislav Kužić
is 93% done
Pétain's government was ready to accept all the conditions that the Germans gave it in order to end the war. The surrender of Jews and political prisoners to Germany, the stay of French prisoners, etc. They were also quick to accuse all supporters of continuing the fight of treason for pushing France into the war. The only positive thing about the Compiègne diktat was that fleet stayed in French hands.
— Jan 30, 2026 01:40AM
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Mislav Kužić
is 92% done
The outlines of what the new France would look like under Pétain's leadership were soon visible. An attempt to transfer part of the government to North Africa was thwarted, and all who resisted were arrested or retired. De Gaulle's call for resistance fell on deaf ears, as most people had given up. A delegation was sent to the negotiations, knowing that they were going to a funeral of liberty, but fleet was the key.
— Jan 29, 2026 09:38AM
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Mislav Kužić
is 90% done
Paul Reynaud had the opportunity to save France from the humiliation of Vichy, but at the moment when he could clean up all the defeatists, he decided to resign. It simply cracked under the pressure. All the later reminiscences of the parties involved was an attempt to repair the damage because they knew what would follow the moment Pétain became prime minister. So de Gaulle fled to London and decided to resist.
— Jan 29, 2026 06:58AM
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