Shall It Be Again?


Lu par Ted Lienhart

While we now view America’s entry into World War I as a necessary step to save Europe from German domination, it was actually one of the most controversial decisions in U.S. history. At the time, the nation was deeply divided, with huge portions of the population bitterly opposed to joining the fight.

In Shall It Be Again?, written just four years after the war ended, John Kenneth Turner contends that President Woodrow Wilson led an unwilling nation into conflict under false pretenses. Turner systematically dismantles the official justifications for the war, labeling them as either hollow or fraudulent. He exposes how Americans were herded into the conflict through government deceit and the harsh suppression of free speech.

By reviewing the methods that President Wilson and his allies throughout society and the business sector used to silence dissent and coerce public cooperation in the war effort, Turner provides a striking look at the origins of modern federal power. - Summary by Ted Lienhart

Chapitres

I The Author Explains 9:00 Lu par Ted Lienhart
II Did the American People Want War? 14:59 Lu par Ted Lienhart
III Was America Ever in Danger? 14:19 Lu par Ted Lienhart
Democracy and Getting into War - IV The Responsibility of One Man 11:32 Lu par Ted Lienhart
V Presidential Usurpations to Achieve Belligerency 12:58 Lu par Ted Lienhart
VI Our Stealthy Approach to War 13:42 Lu par Ted Lienhart
VII The 1916 Election 15:20 Lu par Ted Lienhart
Democracy and the Conduct of War - VIII Executive Duplicity in Imposing the War Policies 14:27 Lu par Ted Lienhart
IX "Democratic" Czarism in War-Time 20:55 Lu par Ted Lienhart
X The War Terror 34:11 Lu par Ted Lienhart
Our War "Causes" - XI Motives Claimed for Belligerency 11:18 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XII Protection of American Commerce 21:18 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XIII Preservation of American Lives 14:21 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XIV War for International Law 7:22 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XV International Law — Our Reversals on the Law in 1915 and 1916 12:56 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XVI International Law — British and German Violations Compared 26:34 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XVII International Law — America's Offenses as Belligerent 22:36 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XVIII Other "Intolerable Wrongs" 23:40 Lu par Ted Lienhart
Our "Objectives" - XIX War for Democracy 6:19 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XX Peace Without Victory Versus Peace From Victory 23:01 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXI The German World Peril Bugaboo 34:03 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXII Our Myth of the War's Beginning 32:45 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXIII The Noble Democracies — Scraps of Paper Atrocities 32:44 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXIV The Noble Democracies and Small Nations 18:22 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXV What Really Started It 27:34 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXVI Promise and Performance 38:39 Lu par Ted Lienhart
Our War and Business - XXVII Patriotism of the Profit-Makers 31:58 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXVIII The Profits of Patriotism 27:29 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXIX Profit-Seeker and Profit-Server 52:49 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXX Secret of the War Profits 15:54 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXXI Wilson Imperialism 23:22 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXXII Mexico 25:54 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXXIII Virgin Islands, Haiti, Santo Domingo and Nicaragua 38:50 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXXIV Strictly Business 18:31 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXXV "The Enemy at Home" 33:40 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXXVI Proof of the Pudding 37:34 Lu par Ted Lienhart
XXXVII "Reconstruction" 25:42 Lu par Ted Lienhart