WW2 was started by leftists.
Another parrot weighs in.
WW2 was started by leftists.
Try holding your breath until you turn blue. See if that makes me scared n stuff. Your spin was never true, and you can't make it true by parroting it over and over and over and more than Democrats parroting their rubbish can. You have a link to the best and most recent source. You're just going to ignore it and keep parroting the Party spin, is all.
No proof, no truth.
Trump don’t mull anything, Putin tells him, get your facts straight
You wouldn't know, you've never read any real history on it, just repeat some spin you heard that sounds good. People love to cite stuff about Johnson that comes from Caro's biography, but they only repeat blurbs they read on the innernutz and have never read Caro's books and don't know what he actually said, and that he had no documented sources on a lot of it, just hearsay. Now you have a link to a real book on WW I, and you will not read it. It isn't of any use to your preferred narratives.
Let me add ...Eisenhower didn’t directly "get us into Vietnam" in the sense of starting the Vietnam War, but his administration laid the groundwork for U.S.
involvement. When Eisenhower took office in 1953, Vietnam was still a French colony embroiled in the First Indochina War against the communist Viet Minh, led by Ho Chi Minh.
The U.S., under Eisenhower, began providing financial and military aid to France to counter the spread of communism, consistent with the Cold War "domino theory." By 1954, the U.S. was funding up to 80% of France’s war effort—hundreds of millions of dollars annually.
After the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, the Geneva Accords split Vietnam into North (communist) and South (anti-communist). Eisenhower rejected the accords’ call for nationwide elections in 1956, fearing a Ho Chi Minh victory, and instead backed Ngo Dinh Diem’s regime in South Vietnam.
He sent military advisors—starting with a few hundred by the end of his term in 1961—to train South Vietnams' army (ARVN). This was a limited commitment: no combat troops, just support. The escalation into full-scale war came later, under Kennedy and Johnson. So, Eisenhower didn’t "get us in" militarily, but his policies—aid, advisors, and propping up Diem—set the stage.
@Grok
LBJ’s escalation began in earnest in 1965 after the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution (August 1964), which gave him broad authority to ramp up U.S. involvement. Operation Rolling Thunder, a massive bombing campaign, started in March 1965, and U.S. troop levels jumped from about 23,000 advisors in 1964 to 184,000 combat troops by the end of 1965, peaking at over 536,000 by 1968. The goal was to crush the Viet Cong (VC), the communist insurgents in South Vietnam, and prop up the Saigon government.
Did it work in three years? Not really. From 1965 to 1968, the Viet Cong took heavy losses—tens of thousands killed, especially during the 1968 Tet Offensive, where they lost an estimated 30,000-40,000 fighters. U.S. and ARVN forces claimed to have weakened the VC’s infrastructure, with General Westmoreland asserting in 1967 that enemy strength was declining.
But the Tet Offensive in January 1968 proved the VC wasn’t destroyed. They launched a coordinated attack across South Vietnam, hitting over 100 targets, including Saigon. Though it was a military loss for the VC (they didn’t hold ground), it shattered the narrative of U.S. progress, turning American public opinion sharply against the war.
By 1968, the VC wasn’t the same force—its ranks were depleted, and North Vietnamese regulars (NVA) increasingly took over. VC numbers dropped from maybe 80,000 in 1965 to a fraction by 1969, with estimates as low as 30,000-40,000 fighters. But "destroyed as a major force" overstates it.
They adapted, shifted to guerrilla tactics, and relied on NVA support. The war dragged on until 1975, with the VC still active in the final push that took Saigon. LBJ’s escalation hurt them badly but didn’t knock them out in three years—resilience and North Vietnam’s backing kept them in the fight.
So, Eisenhower planted seeds; LBJ escalated but didn’t finish the VC in that timeframe. Historical consensus backs this: initial commitment versus all-out war, and heavy damage versus total defeat.
@Grok
Woodrow wanted the war. He requested the declaration. The Lusitania was carrying military supplies, arms and ammunition.You wouldn't like it no matter what, it doesn't fit Republican propaganda narratives. You know where to get the book, as does anybody who really has an interest in the facts and the timelines. 'All the DEms wuz Evul Warmongers N Stuff While The GOP wuz all peace loving victims n stuff' is just silly bullshit, always was and still is.
170+ Republicans voted for war, 32 opposed, 5 abstained. Just a fact.
Woodrow wanted the war. He requested the declaration. The Lusitania was carrying military supplies, arms and ammunition.
44 Democratic and 38 Republican Senators voted for the Declaration.
Congress - 193 Democrats and 176 Republicans voted for the declaration.
does not present evidence of secret, unilateral negotiations between Wilson and Wilhelm II that directly caused a premature armistice.
So you say.
Present your evidence.
Claiming that you've read something in a book authored by someone else isn't evidence.
No proof, no truth.
Did David Stevenson's book Cataclysm prove that Woodrow Wilson was caught secretly negotiating unilateral deals with Kaiser Wilhelm II, leading to a premature Armistice?
No, David Stevenson's book Cataclysm: The First World War as Political Tragedy does not prove that Woodrow Wilson was caught secretly negotiating unilateral deals with Kaiser Wilhelm II, leading to a premature armistice.
Stevenson's work, a comprehensive history of World War I, focuses on the political, economic, and strategic dimensions of the conflict, emphasizing how leaders on all sides retained control and made deliberate choices throughout the war.
It does not present evidence of secret, unilateral negotiations between Wilson and Wilhelm II that directly caused a premature armistice.
Historically, the armistice process began in October 1918 when Germany, facing military collapse, sought peace.
On October 4, 1918, German Chancellor Max von Baden sent a telegram to Wilson, requesting an armistice based on Wilson’s Fourteen Points. This was not a secret deal but a public diplomatic move, initiated by Germany, not Wilson.
Wilson responded with notes on October 8, 14, and 23, setting conditions: Germany must democratize, end submarine warfare, and accept terms ensuring it could not resume fighting.
These exchanges were transparent, involving coordination with the Allies, and culminated in the armistice of November 11, 1918, after Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated on November 9 amid internal unrest and military defeat.
Stevenson’s analysis in Cataclysm aligns with this narrative.
He argues that politicians, including Wilson, shaped the war’s course and end, countering the idea that it was an uncontrollable juggernaut.
He credits Wilson with pushing for a framework that facilitated the armistice—via the Fourteen Points—but criticizes U.S. involvement as belated and diplomatically naive, not secretive or unilateral.
The book does not suggest Wilson conspired with Wilhelm II behind the Allies’ backs.
Instead, it frames the armistice as a result of Germany’s desperation and Allied pressure, with Wilson’s ideals influencing but not solely dictating the outcome.
The idea of “secret negotiations” or a “premature armistice” implies a hidden agenda or a rushed end that undermined the Allies, but Stevenson’s evidence points to a deliberate, if complex, process.
Germany’s military leaders, like Ludendorff and Hindenburg, urged peace as their forces crumbled, and Wilson’s conditions aligned with Allied goals, though tensions existed over harsher terms later imposed at Versailles.
No primary evidence in Cataclysm—or elsewhere in standard histories—supports a clandestine Wilson-Wilhelm deal.
The armistice’s timing reflected battlefield realities and political upheaval in Germany, not a premature betrayal by Wilson.
If poster @EdwinA on JustPlainPolitics.com is referencing a specific claim or interpretation, it doesn’t appear in Stevenson’s Cataclysm based on its widely reviewed content and focus.
The book’s thrust is on broader decision-making, not a conspiracy theory about Wilson and Wilhelm II.
@Grok
I don;t care whether you like it or not. Like I said, you will just play 'I Touched You Last!!!' fifty times. I like discussing history with people who already know the facts ; you don't.
Prove Stevenson is wrong.
The Uboat attacks were justified from the German viewpoint since arms, etc. were being smuggled. Woodrow wanted war and his foreign policy created it. Woodrow way overreacted and overreached with the Sedition Act and Espionage act using them to censor free speech, imprison journalists and put newspapers out of business. And target the I.W.W..German uboat attacks, the Zimmerman telegram, etc., trying to tell us who we could trade with and where we could ship goods. It was more than just the Lusitania, but yeah, most everybody wanted a response to that. Germany had sunk over 114 ships carrying American freight
Yes, it does. The Germans knew he was more favorable in terms for them than Britain and France was, especially re Alsace/Loraine, and approached him several times, and he didn't let his allies know.
You haven't read it, so you have no idea what's in it. lol try again.
I remember when the left wasn't everything Marxist.I remember when the left was anti war.
Irrelevant. "I read it in a book" isn't proof.
No proof, no truth.