That's what we did. Then Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the next day Germany declared war on us.
We didn't have a choice about what side we were on when Germany declared war.
We shouldn't have stopped at Germany. We should have listened to Patton and we should have kept marching into Russia and China and put an end to all the communist bullshit like he wanted. But Roosevelt pulled him back and then made him retire.
This was a fatal mistake. We could have stopped it once Germany surrendered. We could have snuffed it all out right then, right there.
I fear that will be our undoing. If anyone is still alive to write it in the history books.
That's definitely not what we did. We went out of our way to corner Japan and attempt to starve them, using the exact same process we have in numerous countries since. Look up the Japan oil embargo. Tell me if any country, like China, attempted that to us today, that we wouldn't consider it an act of war.
I agree, if we had already been entangled on the wrong side, we should have kept going. But at that point, we already determined the ideology that would rule the world going forward, we may have in fact deprived it of a moderating force of Stalin. Trotsky, not Stalin, is the father of movements like BLM and Antifa.
We maybe could've beaten China at that point, but why? They weren't a threat. You're looking back with 75 years of hindsight. Try figuring out what to do now ...
The US government exclusively supported the "allies" before joining that war, despite there being public support for Germany very early on and for Adolf prior to conflict with Britain. The US put selective pressure on Japan, depleting their access to fuel which forced them into striking the US, in a reckless gamble to cease embargoes placed on them. All part of the bankers and deep state of the time's plan, Germany was obligated to declare war on behalf of Japan and was already dealing with US equipment, vehicles and pilots as it was, so the US was never neutral at all.
That's what we did. Then Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the next day Germany declared war on us.
We didn't have a choice about what side we were on when Germany declared war.
We shouldn't have stopped at Germany. We should have listened to Patton and we should have kept marching into Russia and China and put an end to all the communist bullshit like he wanted. But Roosevelt pulled him back and then made him retire.
This was a fatal mistake. We could have stopped it once Germany surrendered. We could have snuffed it all out right then, right there.
I fear that will be our undoing. If anyone is still alive to write it in the history books.
That's definitely not what we did. We went out of our way to corner Japan and attempt to starve them, using the exact same process we have in numerous countries since. Look up the Japan oil embargo. Tell me if any country, like China, attempted that to us today, that we wouldn't consider it an act of war.
I agree, if we had already been entangled on the wrong side, we should have kept going. But at that point, we already determined the ideology that would rule the world going forward, we may have in fact deprived it of a moderating force of Stalin. Trotsky, not Stalin, is the father of movements like BLM and Antifa.
We didn't sell to both sides.
You kids need to learn some history, wtf!
We couldn't have beat the USSR. (Again, history?)
We maybe could've beaten China at that point, but why? They weren't a threat. You're looking back with 75 years of hindsight. Try figuring out what to do now ...
The US government exclusively supported the "allies" before joining that war, despite there being public support for Germany very early on and for Adolf prior to conflict with Britain. The US put selective pressure on Japan, depleting their access to fuel which forced them into striking the US, in a reckless gamble to cease embargoes placed on them. All part of the bankers and deep state of the time's plan, Germany was obligated to declare war on behalf of Japan and was already dealing with US equipment, vehicles and pilots as it was, so the US was never neutral at all.