The right and morality of Great Britain to go to war with Germany

Another Look at "the Good War"
User avatar
InuYasha
Posts: 109
Joined: Wed Mar 19, 2025 7:27 am

Re: The right and morality of Great Britain to go to war with Germany

Post by InuYasha »

TlsMS93 wrote: Fri Jun 06, 2025 10:18 pm So much so that the Soviets attacked Poland in 1920, but that didn't mean a world war started, and that was because the Bolsheviks were interested in reaching Germany.

Considering the secret protocol that was aimed exclusively at Germany, it is clear that Chamberlain capitulated to the pro-war barons to stay in power and clean up his image, which was ridiculed as a fifth column because of Czechoslovakia.

The English, with their divide and conquer strategy, never wanted or allowed a European nation to hold dominant influence on the continent, as was the case with Spain, France and Germany. So the issue is never about the necks of others; countries don't have friends, they have interests.
Yes, this is exactly the "divided continent" strategy, in the name of which the British fought Spain, Prussia, destroyed Napoleon and Adolf. Germany by 1939 was very influential, and could potentially unite Europe.

Therefore, security guarantees did not extend to other countries, only the Germans would get a war if they encountered Poland.

When the Red Army was in Poland (the miracle on the Vistula) in 1920, it had almost exhausted its offensive potential, at that time the Allied countries (the British, Americans, Japanese) were also intervening in the territory of the former Empire, and Russia itself was burning in the fire of civil war. It was not such a threat to the "divided continent" as Germany was nineteen years later.

Mr Stubble mentioned the so-called "focus group" that brought Churchill to power and was interested in war with the Reich. Although it was Chamberlain in 1939, not Churchill, I suppose they may also have influenced Chamberlain's cabinet in deciding to go to war.
Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.
(c) JFK
User avatar
Stubble
Posts: 1632
Joined: Sun Dec 08, 2024 10:43 am

Re: The right and morality of Great Britain to go to war with Germany

Post by Stubble »

Your synopsis in the last few posts has been remarkably concise and very well put together.

(Oops, wrong thread, the accolade is for the 'Hitler's Prophecy' thread posts.)

Regarding Chamberlin and 'The Focus', the war became unavoidable when Germany went over the line. This was with or without 'The Focus'.

Personally I think you need to pan out a bit more and look at the western powers and the oligarchy to see the larger drivers for that decision.

When I talk about 'The Focus' it is almost exclusively with regard to putting the drunk that would bankrupt England into the driver's seat in England. They are part of the puzzle, but, the mosaic is significantly larger when you include the many other nations, parties and moving parts.

G Edward Griffin actually has a pretty good outline on the names and faces (of the American machine), where they went after the war, and what fruit the put on the vine in 'The Subversion Factor'. Of course, as a Bircher, he never says jew. When he names a jew, it is always by their given name.
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
Post Reply