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Call To Power 2 Cradle 3+ mod in progress: https://apolyton.net/forum/other-games/call-to-power-2/ctp2-creation/9437883-making-cradle-3-fully-compatible-with-the-apolyton-edition
Japan and Germany were two major powers both with major designs on expansion, and thus obvious enemies.
Sitting around doing nothing was certainly not going to help its interests in the future.
If the US was so interested in saving democracy, why did it do nothing to overthrow countless other despotic regimes, both before and after the war? And why did it assist in overthrowing democratically elected governments, simply because they were not America friendly?
SD, Other than the names of the leaders, what you attribute to Japan and Germany in 1939 could be also said of England in the 1600-1900 timeframe: a major power set on expansion.
Japan and Germany both made the argument in the last century that they too had a right to an Empire to rival that of England's, and to some extent, WWII was about England's attempt to resist both German (Poland was an English client-state) and Japanese expansion (Hong Kong, Singapore, Shanghai). At the outbreak of WWII, England was the largest empire on Earth. The threat the Germans posed was not to America, but to England. Your argument views the world with a false assumption - that America had the empire under threat. It was England's empire that was threatened, not an American empire.
I still do not understand why we had any interest in intervening in the Sino-Japanese conflict. Nor do I understand what American interests were involved in Europe. It appears we intervened in the East to help China and in the West to help England. But, where were our interests? Why the f*ck did we intervene? Did Churchill simply employ his American ancestry to influence Roosevelt? Did the anti-Nazi Jack Kenndy change the course of history with his Harvard thesis?
If people here would get off the internet and listen to the radio they might know stuff. The following quote should end any debate about the character of America.
***
President Bush on Saturday closed out the final hours of his 32-day escape from Washington by designating September as a month of service to honor victims of Sept. 11.
"That spirit of courage and selflessness has shown the world why our nation is the greatest force for good in history," Bush said from his Texas ranch in his weekly radio address
I was practically rolling on the ground laughing. I've heard of your reputation as a whiny ***** who announced he was "leaving forever" due to excessive moderation and then didn't, but I haven't seen you post enough to decide whether you've an astute sense of satire or simply lack the ability to detect it at all...
Originally posted by Frogger
Yup. I especially loved the bit where you said:
If people here would get off the internet and listen to the radio they might know stuff. The following quote should end any debate about the character of America.
***
President Bush on Saturday closed out the final hours of his 32-day escape from Washington by designating September as a month of service to honor victims of Sept. 11.
"That spirit of courage and selflessness has shown the world why our nation is the greatest force for good in history," Bush said from his Texas ranch in his weekly radio address
I was practically rolling on the ground laughing. I've heard of your reputation as a whiny ***** who announced he was "leaving forever" due to excessive moderation and then didn't, but I haven't seen you post enough to decide whether you've an astute sense of satire or simply lack the ability to detect it at all...
SD, Other than the names of the leaders, what you attribute to Japan and Germany in 1939 could be also said of England in the 1600-1900 timeframe: a major power set on expansion.
Japan and Germany both made the argument in the last century that they too had a right to an Empire to rival that of England's, and to some extent, WWII was about England's attempt to resist both German (Poland was an English client-state) and Japanese expansion (Hong Kong, Singapore, Shanghai). At the outbreak of WWII, England was the largest empire on Earth. The threat the Germans posed was not to America, but to England. Your argument views the world with a false assumption - that America had the empire under threat. It was England's empire that was threatened, not an American empire.
I still do not understand why we had any interest in intervening in the Sino-Japanese conflict. Nor do I understand what American interests were involved in Europe. It appears we intervened in the East to help China and in the West to help England. But, where were our interests? Why the f*ck did we intervene? Did Churchill simply employ his American ancestry to influence Roosevelt? Did the anti-Nazi Jack Kenndy change the course of history with his Harvard thesis?
Germany and Japan were led by evil regimes. Its that simple. Italy was too.
The Japanese military kidnapped and recruited thousands of women, many from Korea, and forced them to be prostitutes for the army. Most of the women were expected to service twenty to thirty men per day.
The Nanjing massacre. Killing competitions that were done to boost morale. Beheading of children. Live burials. Japanese scientists tested gas gangrene and other microbes on Chinese prisoners.
Eight American POWs were experimented on by Japanese doctors. They removed part of one's lung, another's liver, tested cures of epilepsy on a third. All died.
I can't even begin to get into the Nazi's etermination policys.
Originally posted by Sava
Ned, don't make stupid points. You're only making jimmytrick look good.
Sava, If the argument is that Germany, Japan and Italy were an "Axis of Evil," and this legitimized our intervention, then why was it OK then and not OK now?
I merely want to illustrate, by forcing the point, that our intervention was ideological, pure and simple. These Axis folks were evil in the late 1930's, just as are the current axis of evil.
Y'all have this persecution complex, but when it comes down to it:
Who starts threads proclaiming their country the greatest country ever to have existed? Americans. Nobody else.
So bullsh*t on there being some predominance of US haters here. From what I've seen, it's a fairly decent cross-section of opinions from across the First World. Other people don't think the US is as great as the average American does. No big surprise. Deal with it.
There are those who hate the US irrationally and those who love it irrationally here. Neither attribute impresses me.
Originally posted by Frogger
Who starts threads proclaiming their country the greatest country ever to have existed? Americans. Nobody else.
For every "America is the greatest thread", there are at least 10 to 20 America Sucks threads... With the rare exception of Joke threads, Americans don't start "Your country sucks" threads
Umm...the only "America sucks" threads I see come from 14 year-old American whiners. Most of the stuff posted "attacking" the US is far more specific.
I wouldn't have minded if this had been a thread about why the American constitution is a great document, or why the American capitalist system will save the world, or about how the US helped...I don't know, Country X when it was starving.
Istead, we see stuff about the US being the "greatest force for good in history". That's not arrogant, much?
There seems to be this constant feeling among the bigger Ami patriots here that any specific attack against something the US has done = part of a well-planned plot to destabilize the US, and the only way to counter it is: "USA! USA! USA!". There's no plot. If we were that organised we'd be out fomenting actual revolt, not posting **** here. In general, people post when they're pissed off about something specific, not when it's "bash the US time". There are those, as I've said, who do have an inherent, irrational dislike for the US. At least they try to cover up their motives and post subjects it's possible to discuss in some meaningful way (remember Comrade Tribbie? Even he managed to do this for the most part) instead of actually starting "America Suxorz! I'm tired of all you Americans saying good things about the US"...
Frogger, It may come as a surprise to you, but most Americans are proud of their country and really do believe it is a force for good in the world. True, we make mistakes. Vietnam was a beauty. However, this country truly believes it can make a difference - for the better.
Even so, there remains a strong isolationist tendency in the US. Surprisingly, most isolationists are Republicans.
Whether we are the best country that ever existed, that is a separate debate. We are still young and growing. History will judge us.
But as I said, most Americans are proud of their country.
We however are concerned that many other countries do not share the same rosy view of America. You may not think that we actually listen to the criticism, but we do. Sometimes it makes us mad. But at other times, we find some merit in negative views, particularly if they are digested and analyzed for us by wise old heads like Kissinger or Powell. Even Bill Clinton is someone we listen to on this topic.
So, I agree. If there is something specific that we have done that is annoying, stupid or just plain wrong, you can be sure that someone here will start a thread. The debate is always interesting.
Notyou, about whether or not the Cold War presidents really believed what they were doing was right--Hitler thought what he was doing was right?
So what was your point?
And I have another question--isn't the United States still operating that training school in Latin America to train native soldiers on how to terrorize their people into submission??
I think it's called the School of America, or something like that.
A lot of Republicans are not racist, but a lot of racists are Republican.
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