A Century of War |
| March 24 2011 | |
|
More than 170 million people were killed by governments with 10 million having been killed in World War I and 50 million killed in World II. Of the 50 million killed in World War II, nearly 70 percent were innocent civilians, many as a result of the bombing of cities by Great Britain and America. The horror of the twentieth century could hardly have been predicted in the nineteenth century, which saw the eighteenth century end with the American Revolution bringing about the creation of the first classical liberal government in the world. What bought it about? How can it be prevented in the future? These are the concerns that animate this work. Denson recounts how the wars that destroyed American liberty came about through a series of deceitful political ploys. He discusses how Lincoln worked to provoke the South into firing the first shot, and how he used that shot as the pretext for total war. Wilson learned from this experience in working to get the US involved in World War I, which established a precedent for the planning state. FDR similarly engaged in political maneuvering to prepare a reluctant public for war. Denson provides a close examination of the rise of executive dictatorship, and demonstrates how far from the founders' vision of government we have come. It explains how world peace can only come through the practice of free trade and free markets, and why large government can only create conflict both domestic and international. The Denson book is a wonderful
presentation of a position that was more mainstream in the 1930s and the
1990s: the unity of libertarian economics with a pro-peace foreign
policy position. This position is far too rare in American life. This
eye-opening treatment of history will go a long way toward restoring
this proper libertarian perspective in American life. Download Free eBook: A Century of War PDF format, 2MB, 208Pages. John V. Denson CENTURY OF WAR
More than 170 million people were killed by governments with ten million being killed in World War I and fifty million killed in World War II. In regard to the fifty million killed in World War II, it is significant that nearly 70 percent were innocent civilians, mainly as a result of the bombing of cities by Great Britain and America. This number of fifty million deaths does not include the estimated six to twelve million Russians killed by Stalin before World War II, and the several million people he killed after the war ended when Roosevelt delivered to him one-third of Europe as part of the settlement conferences. George Crocker’s excellent book Roosevelt’s Road to Russia describes the settlement conferences, such as Yalta, and shows how Roosevelt enhanced communism in Russia and China through deliberate concessions which strengthened it drastically, while Nazism was being extinguished in Germany. ... Comments (0)
![]() Write comment
|
|
| Last Updated ( March 24 2011 ) |
| Next > |
|---|
Lots of FREE books & magazines delivered directly to your e-mail inbox!
| Profit Magazine |
| Aerospace Manufacturing and Design |
| Beverage World Magazine |
| Hydrocarbon Processing |
| Supply & Demand Chain Executive |
| NASA Tech Briefs |
| Nature Biotechnology |
| Renewable Energy World |