
They Cheer - When You Use No Altitude
In this desert-set WWII-era safety poster, a battered pilot crouches beside his wrecked aircraft, gripping the bent control stick still attached to the nose of the plane. Bandaged and wide-eyed, he’s just crash-landed after flying too low — his looping smoke trail ending abruptly in the cracked earth. Behind a mountain ridge, Axis leaders Hitler, Tojo, and Mussolini cheer with visible satisfaction, thrilled to witness another costly Allied mistake. This image is part of the “They Cheer” series — a set of 16 posters produced during World War II by the Directorate of Air Traffic and Safety and the Directorate of Safety Education. These bold, comic-style visuals were designed to reinforce critical safety lessons to young military aviators undergoing fast-tracked training. The exaggerated scenes use irony and enemy approval to add urgency to routine protocols. In this case, the message is unmistakable: never fly so low that you leave yourself no room to recover. The visual design is both l