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![]() "clifto" wrote in message ... Frank Dresser wrote: "clifto" wrote... Check your history. The country was full of anti-war leftists; that's what kept us out for the first two years. The history I learned says it was the Roosevelt administration which most wanted us in the war. The Republicans were against it, as was a large part of the US population, particularly in rural areas. Yeah, especially high-ranking Republicans like Joe Kennedy. Whatever influence Joe Kennedy had in the Roosevelt administration ended when Roosevelt fired him for insubordination. Had the Boston Republican brahmins been more hospitible to Irish Catholics, the Kennedys might have been as Republican as the Rockefellers. Joe Kennedy did ended up liking Joe McCarthy much better than he liked Roosevelt. He was making too much money doing business with Hitler. OK, you've got me there. I've heard about Kennedy's sleazy financial deals and mob connections, but I missed Kennedy's business ties with Hitler. Please fill me in. That's also why it took nearly a year to get armaments produced; they kept the military budgets down back then, too. Liberals kept military budgets down? Maybe. The depression certainly did. Roosevelt would have spent more, but even he had problems with his own tax and spend party. The borrow and spend party did not yet exist in it's current form. On the contrary, I'm pretty sure by this time Roosevelt had the WPA and other stuff going and was well on the road to the free-money-for-the- indolent economy. Roosevelt was an anglophile and became a strong freind of Winston Churchill well before the Pearl Harbor attack. He was way ahead of the American public in wanting to give direct aid to the British. His opposition came from those who wanted to keep American money and weapons in America. I don't see any contradiction in being a welfare statist and wanting to get America involved with the war. They even had people flee the country to avoid the draft. Let's not forget that the country was still in a funk over the First World War, after which the "anti-foriegn entanglement" stance of Washington and Jefferson made perfect sense to many people. And conspiracy theories aren't a new product of twentyfirst century SW radio. There was then no shortage of people who thought the blood spilled in the First World War was only to benefit arms manufacturers and bankers. Difference was that the press back then was pro-America and didn't make heroes out of such scum. Would that press also include such prominent isolationists as Col. Robert McCormack of the Chicago Tribune? AAMOF, once Pearl Harbor was a fact, he pretty much went with the flow. I don't suppose he'd have had much choice; people back then would boycott a product for antisocial behavior. Both the Pearl Harbor attack and Hitler's declaration of war against the US ended the isolationist movement. The isolationists weren't pacifists, but they weren't interested in war with nations which weren't declared enemies of the US. Many US liberals of the era were admirers of the Soviet Union and ended their neutrality earlier when the Nazis broke the Hitler-Stalin pact. Frank Dresser |
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