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So, one of our Professors doesn't like to say "support our t
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Re: VT English Ass't Professor
fity snuck in the other night and did it first. Dave can merge threads together and did so with that.USN_Hokie wrote:Congratulations, you've broken the New UWS dupe post cherry.
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Re: So, one of our Professors doesn't like to say "support o
Marine Hokie wrote:awesome guy wrote:That's one of our lessons learned from WWII
So WWII happened because of a lack of US military bases in other countries?
I know your history teacher told you otherwise, but post WWI isolationism is a myth to encourage policies of intervention (like you're doing here).awesome guy wrote:after return to isolationism after WWI.
That the US didn't join the League of Nations is hardly isolationism. Protective tariffs (economic isolation) and stricter immigration policies may have been bad, but they don't count as isolationism either.
Historians who specialize in the area reject that the US was in a period of isolationism, and instead insist that it was a period of internationalism. The US government's involvement in the Washington Naval conference, the Dawes Plan (I realize this wasn't an official government action other than by proxy), and various treaties destroys any argument that there was a period of isolationism.
The U.S. populace (voters) were isolationist though. IIRC, FDR wanted to get involved in WWII earlier, but he didn't have enough popular support. It wasn't until after Pearl Harbor that the public jumped on board.
One might argue that Japan attacked us because they saw the U.S. as encroaching on their 'turf', but that's a different argument.
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Re: So, one of our Professors doesn't like to say "support o
They weren't, but Awesome and I were discussing the US government, not the people.
In general, the people weren't isolationists either. They wanted global trade, immigration, etc. They were non-interventionists.
Japan attacked because the US implemented a complete trade embargo with Japan, froze Japanese assets in the US, and encouraged other countries to do the same. The lend lease act didn't help. There were other things that led to it, but I'm not really clear on why you're bringing it up here.
In general, the people weren't isolationists either. They wanted global trade, immigration, etc. They were non-interventionists.
Japan attacked because the US implemented a complete trade embargo with Japan, froze Japanese assets in the US, and encouraged other countries to do the same. The lend lease act didn't help. There were other things that led to it, but I'm not really clear on why you're bringing it up here.
HokieJoe wrote:Marine Hokie wrote:awesome guy wrote:That's one of our lessons learned from WWII
So WWII happened because of a lack of US military bases in other countries?
I know your history teacher told you otherwise, but post WWI isolationism is a myth to encourage policies of intervention (like you're doing here).awesome guy wrote:after return to isolationism after WWI.
That the US didn't join the League of Nations is hardly isolationism. Protective tariffs (economic isolation) and stricter immigration policies may have been bad, but they don't count as isolationism either.
Historians who specialize in the area reject that the US was in a period of isolationism, and instead insist that it was a period of internationalism. The US government's involvement in the Washington Naval conference, the Dawes Plan (I realize this wasn't an official government action other than by proxy), and various treaties destroys any argument that there was a period of isolationism.
The U.S. populace (voters) were isolationist though. IIRC, FDR wanted to get involved in WWII earlier, but he didn't have enough popular support. It wasn't until after Pearl Harbor that the public jumped on board.
One might argue that Japan attacked us because they saw the U.S. as encroaching on their 'turf', but that's a different argument.
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