| quote: Originally posted by Theben on 07-22-2000 12:09 PM While I don't disagree with the basic premise of your post, I find it annoying that you dismiss his agrument w/o trying to refute it. We don't need blind followers on the left. Maybe you should take his advice and read a book or two.  | 
Well as you can probably tell I'm not much of a debator but I don't feel obligated to answer to a post by S. Kroeze which was clearly not his own. And I have also proposed most of my arguements in previous posts. But you must note that I refuted his arguements about Hitler because they were clearly his.
In addition, my opinions don't come from a book. I came to these by reading books and taking world history courses. I can't credit S. Kroeze with much because the least he could have done is paraphrased the arguements. If he believed them then he shouldn't have just copied them straight. Unless he quoted them and then wrote his opinions under it.
I agree that this topic should be moved to off-topic or locked.
------------------
"I'm too out of shape for a long fight so I'll have to kill you fast"
"If the great Emperors of Rome, Egypt and Greece were alive today, do you think they would prefer Coke or Pepsi?"
[This message has been edited by CornMaster (edited July 22, 2000).]
 Oh, and that "token" American force numbered 50,000. Not to mention the numerous other nations that attacked: Germany, Poland, The Cossacks (Khazhak now), others I don't recall...around 10 nations attacked at once. Fortunately for the Russians most of the forces were demoralized Germans.
 (admittedly the author might have made it before this section). But it doesn't make me think the guy's totally objective. Unless he means a nation that supported revolution elsewhere: not unlike the French in the American revolution and the U.S. in most of the 20th century?
 A word to Par4: Do you really want to compare x-millions of dead jews on one side, x-million dead peasants on the other side? Both was inacceptable!!!!!!
: A word to the evil capitalist: Prussia gained Silesia in 1742 from Maria Theresia and lost it after WWI
Comment