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Time Machine Diaries: Ancient Civilizations & Future World Predictions.

Time Machine Diaries: Ancient Civilizations & Future World Predictions.

By: CNC Productions
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An auditory journey through history; From ancient civilizations to futuristic visions, our host guides you through immersive narratives, blending facts with fiction to explore what it means to time travel through the human experience. Music by https://www.youtube.com/ Sound effects by https://www.voicy.network/ Music and Sound Effects by https://pixabay.com/ Donate patreon.com/THO420 Music and SFX https://archive.org/ Sources: https://www.britannica.com/ https://www.nationalww2museum.org/CNC Productions Science Fiction
Episodes
  • The Breadbasket Graveyard: Ukraine 1933 (Holodomor — Starvation as a Weapon) Pt1.
    Jan 26 2026

    In this gut-wrenching multi-part episode of Time Machine Diaries, Cullen dives into one of the darkest crimes of the 20th century: the Holodomor, the Ukrainian starvation of 1932–1933.

    This was not a natural famine. It was engineered.

    Through forced collectivization, impossible grain quotas, confiscation brigades, blacklisted villages, and sealed borders, Stalin’s Soviet state turned food into a weapon and transformed Ukraine, Europe’s breadbasket, into a graveyard.

    This episode breaks down how the system worked step-by-step, what starvation looked like in real villages, how survival was criminalized, and how propaganda tried to bury the truth for decades. It also makes uncomfortable modern comparisons to how power still controls people through resources, media narratives, and bureaucracy.

    This isn’t just history.

    It’s a warning.

    Books
    Applebaum, Anne. Red Famine: Stalin’s War on Ukraine. Doubleday, 2017.
    Conquest, Robert. The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine. Oxford UP, 1986.
    Davies, R. W., and Stephen G. Wheatcroft. The Years of Hunger: Soviet Agriculture, 1931–1933. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
    Fitzpatrick, Sheila. Stalin’s Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization. Oxford UP, 1994.
    Graziosi, Andrea. The Great Soviet Peasant War: Bolsheviks and Peasants, 1917–1933. Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute, 1996.
    Hosking, Geoffrey. Rulers and Victims: The Russians in the Soviet Union. Harvard UP, 2006.
    Marples, David R. Heroes and Villains: Creating National History in Contemporary Ukraine. Central European UP, 2007.
    Snyder, Timothy. Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. Basic Books, 2010.
    Viola, Lynne. The Unknown Gulag: The Lost World of Stalin’s Special Settlements. Oxford UP, 2007.

    Academic / Research Collections
    Kulchytsky, Stanislav. “The Holodomor of 1932–33 as Genocide.” Nationalities Papers, Cambridge UP, various issues/chapters.
    Plokhy, Serhii. The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine. Basic Books, 2015.
    Subtelny, Orest. Ukraine: A History. U of Toronto P, 2009.

    Primary Sources / Contemporary Reporting
    The Gareth Jones and Malcolm Muggeridge famine reporting (1933) — published dispatches and archival reprints in various collections.
    Soviet archival documents and grain procurement records (commonly cited in Davies & Wheatcroft; Applebaum).

    Documentaries / Film
    Holodomor: Ukraine’s Genocide of 1932–1933. (various versions; commonly distributed in educational releases).
    The Soviet Story. Directed by Edvīns Šnore, 2008.
    Harvest of Despair: The 1932–33 Famine in Ukraine. Directed by Slavko Nowytski, 1984.

    Museums / Institutions (Great for show notes credibility)
    Holodomor Research and Education Consortium (HREC).
    National Museum of the Holodomor-Genocide (Kyiv).
    U.S. Commission on the Ukraine Famine (Congressional commission report materials).


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    12 mins
  • Nobody Here Is From Here: The Irish Famine, Immigration, and the Lie of “Real Americans”.
    Jan 19 2026

    Every single person in the United States came from somewhere else, except Native Americans, who were here first, full stop.

    Using the Irish Potato Famine as the backbone, this episode connects forced migration, racial hierarchy, and modern immigration panic into one continuous story. From famine ships to “No Irish Need Apply,” from becoming “white” to forgetting what that cost, this episode dismantles the myth of the “real American” and exposes how every generation rewrites its own arrival story to justify cruelty toward the next.

    Kinealy, Christine. This Great Calamity: The Irish Famine 1845–52. Gill & Macmillan, 1994.

    Ó Gráda, Cormac. Black ’47 and Beyond: The Great Irish Famine in History, Economy, and Memory. Princeton University Press, 1999.

    Mitchel, John. The Last Conquest of Ireland (Perhaps). James McGlashan, 1861.

    The Times (London). Various editorials on the Irish potato blight, 1846–1847. British Newspaper Archive.

    Hickman, Mary J. “Racialized Boundaries: The Irish as an ‘Other’ in Britain and the United States.” Ethnic and Racial Studies, vol. 21, no. 2, 1998, pp. 288–312.

    Ignatiev, Noel. How the Irish Became White. Routledge, 1995.

    Diner, Hasia R. Erin’s Daughters in America: Irish Immigrant Women in the Nineteenth Century. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983.

    Library of Congress. “Immigration and American Expansion, 1800–1900.”
    www.loc.gov.

    Irish Central. O’Dowd, Niall. “Was It Genocide? What the British Ruling Class Really Said About the Irish Famine.” IrishCentral, 19 Apr. 2023.

    Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum. “Population Loss and Emigration.” Quinnipiac University.

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    22 mins
  • Shadows Before Liberation: Freddie, Hannie, Truus, and the Children Forced to Fight
    Jan 12 2026

    They were teenagers when the world collapsed around them. Not symbols. Not myths. Not side characters in someone else’s war.

    Freddie Oversteegen, her sister Truus, and Hannie Schaft came of age inside a system designed to erase people quietly and efficiently. The Nazi occupation of the Netherlands did not begin with gunfire in the streets. It began with paperwork, compliance, neighbors staying silent, and children learning far too quickly that adulthood had arrived early.

    This episode traces the slow suffocation of Dutch society under occupation, the mechanics of how resistance actually worked, and why teenage girls became some of its most effective weapons. It confronts the uncomfortable truth that child soldiers are not an anomaly of distant wars but a recurring outcome of systemic collapse, propaganda, and moral failure.

    Freddie did not choose violence because she wanted to. She chose it because the alternatives disappeared one by one. Her story forces a modern reckoning with how radicalization happens, how children adapt to survive when adults fail, and why history keeps pretending this is someone else’s problem.

    This is not a story about hero worship.
    It is a story about pressure, necessity, and the cost of living through occupation.

    Sources:

    de Jong, Loe. The Netherlands and Nazi Germany. Harvard University Press, 1990.

    Moore, Bob. Victims and Survivors: The Nazi Persecution of the Jews in the Netherlands 1940–1945. Arnold Publishers, 1997.

    Warmbrunn, Werner. The Dutch under German Occupation 1940–1945. Stanford University Press, 1963.

    Schaft, Hannie. In the Shadow of the Gallows. Translated editions, Dutch Resistance Archives, various printings.

    Singer, P. W. Children at War. University of California Press, 2005.

    Netherlands Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies (NIOD). Women in the Dutch Resistance. NIOD, archival research collections.

    Dutch Resistance Museum. Freddie Oversteegen and Truus Oversteegen Oral Histories. Amsterdam, museum archival materials.

    Anne Frank House. Dutch Resistance and Civilian Life Under Occupation. Anne Frank House Research Division, Amsterdam.

    United Nations Office of the Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict. Children and Armed Conflict: Recruitment and Radicalization. United Nations, thematic reports.

    Netherlands Public Broadcasting (NPO). Women of the Dutch Resistance. Documentary series, NPO Archives.

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    15 mins
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