With the beginning of the Second World War in 1939, many new laws and prohibitions were established in Nazi Germany, forcing the population to decide whether to obey the Nazi regime or to risk being declared “criminals”. One of those new laws introduced on 1 September 1939, the first day of the German Invasion of Poland, concerned the “extraordinary radio-measures act” (German: Verordnung über außerordentliche Rundfunkmaßnahmen).
This law prohibited deliberate listening to any foreign radio station under threat of penal servitude. Likewise all non-governmental radio transmissions were banned and all critical equipment of German amateur radio operators were seized by the Reichspost authorities.
Feindsender - Wikipedia
History always repeats because people never learn history.
This law prohibited deliberate listening to any foreign radio station under threat of penal servitude. Likewise all non-governmental radio transmissions were banned and all critical equipment of German amateur radio operators were seized by the Reichspost authorities.
Feindsender - Wikipedia
History always repeats because people never learn history.