Hitler fanboy caught being dishost? Well, I for one am shocked.
Oh dear.
Look, you (or the people you are summarising) are implying that the US bankers plotted around the Lusitania (1915) because they feared a German victory...while at the same time screwing Russia over (whether intentionally or not) with arms deals that were rather one-sided, right through 1916. Do you not see the slight problem with that argument?
Do you not see the slight problem with that argument?
Not really. Don't know the details on the arms deal, but I'd imagine bankers would love to screw both sides of any war in every deal. The result would be that the Russians would get the arms, win the war, and bonus, be indebted indefinitely to the banks. A win win.
Is it just me or do CT Loons have simply NO IDEA of what Bankers actually do in the real world?
Read 'Confessions of an Economic Hitman' ... you might learn something, then again, you might not.
Churchill admirers are outraged that their hero is revealed as the first war criminal of World War II. It was Churchill who initiated the policy of terror bombing civilians in noncombatant areas. Buchanan quotes B.H. Liddell Hart: "When Mr. Churchill came into power, one of the first decisions of his government was to extend bombing to the noncombatant area."
I repeat: it was the British, not the Germans who started to bomb civilians. The Anglos threw 20 times as much on Germany as Germany (reluctantly forced to retaliate) threw on Britain.
Read 'Confessions of an Economic Hitman' ... you might learn something, then again, you might not.
History would appear to disagree wth you
One of the odd behaviour patterns adopted by most Holocaust Deniers is the illogical claim that Churchill was responsible for every evil act of the war. Churchill wasn't even prime minister when war was declared.
Then again some of us have high degrees in economics and history and laugh at the concept that banks caused WW1.
Well to be truthful (as an Australian)I dont have a high opinion of Churchill either. However he was a man of his time and he made decisions based on what was best for Britian.
But all that aside, the thing everyone has to remember WW2 was a truely horrible time, and by the end of it the lines between the good guys and bad guys had become badly blurred. Particularly the intentional targeting of civilians.
The victors got to express their outrage at Nuremberg, but admitted their own guilt by the creation of the war crimes commission, and the whole crimes against humanity legislation.
But as you suggest, many try to lessen the crimes of the Nazis by focusing on the actions of others. Great....so people thinl Churchill should have been charged with war crimes. It still does not excuse the action of Hitler and his plonker mates
There are better fantasy novels out there, to be honest.
Read 'Confessions of an Economic Hitman' ... you might learn something, then again, you might not.
Do you not see the slight problem with that argument?
Not really. Don't know the details on the arms deal, but I'd imagine bankers would love to screw both sides of any war in every deal. The result would be that the Russians would get the arms, win the war, and bonus, be indebted indefinitely to the banks. A win win.
Deals, plural.
You see the problem is, though, that the Russians often didn't get the arms they were paying for...resulting in a shortage of arms and ammunition. Hastening the collapse, and threatening defeat for the west. Not the actions of people who were apparently steering this whole thing to make a profit, and who had to get the US into the war because they feared defeat, at a time when they were failing to support Russia...
In other words, it really doesn't hold water.
Not that I expect you to take any of that on board.
What is truly ironic, of course, is that through all this he accuses anyone who disagrees with him of black-and-white thinking. I've yet to see anyone on this thread assert that the Allies were entirely virtuous in all their actions in both World Wars; in fact, I think most would agree that neither side came out of WW1 with a great deal of credit. And yet, this is the strawman view of history that 9/11 tries to attack. And how does he do so? By a simply inversion; he attacks a fictitious Germany-bad, Allies-good position by asserting that everything Germany did was good and everything the Allies did was bad. In fact, his thinking is far more black-and-white than anyone else's in this thread; he's just defining black and white in the opposite sense to the one he likes to pretend everyone else uses.
Dave
You see the problem is, though, that the Russians often didn't get the arms they were paying for...
Why not, pray tell. As a result of the purposeful actions of the bankers? Sounds very unlikely. Let's have the full story.
From memory, it was largely a mixture of rather unscrupulous business men making a fast buck (or pound), and shipments simply never being sent...or being delayed for lengthy periods (ie incompetence at the factory end).
Now, I might be misinterpreting your scenario (but I don't think I am), but I'm reading it that you think there was some cabal of business men and bankers who engineered the war, and when presented with a possible German victory then engineered the US entry into the war via the Lusitania (which you mentioned earlier). Since they were powerful enough to achieve that, then I would expect them to be powerful enough to ensure that important arms shipments were actually, you know, shipped.
If they couldn't achieve that, then I have to say the idea they could manipulate the war in any meaningful way really strikes me as unlikely in the extreme.