On the Commemoration of World War I: From Woodrow Wilson to Donald Trump

Guest Post by Antonius Aquinas

Trump - Wilson

It is altogether fitting that the US attack on a Syrian airport, the dropping of a MOAB on defenseless Afghanistan, and the potential outbreak of nuclear war with North Korea have all come in the very month one hundred years earlier that an American president led the nation on its road to empire.  President Trump’s aggressive actions and all of America’s previous imperialistic endeavors can ultimately be traced to Woodrow Wilson’s disastrous decision to bring the country into the First World War on April 6, 1917.

This month, therefore, should be one of national mourning for the decision to enter that horrific conflict changed America and, for that matter, the world for the worse.

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Had the US remained neutral, the war would most likely have come to a far quicker and more politically palatable conclusion, however, the entry of America on the Entente side prolonged the conflict and extended its economic and political destruction to such a degree that the Old Order could not be put back together again.  The great dynasties (Germany, Russia, and especially Austria) were ruthlessly dismantled at the conclusion of WWI by the explicit designs of Wilson which left a power vacuum across Central Europe.  The vacuum, of course, was filled by the various collectivist “isms” which produced the landscape for another global conflagration even greater than WWI.

For America, after a brief revival of isolationism and non-interventionist sentiment throughout the land, the country, led by another ruthless and power-mad chief executive, provoked and schemed its way into the second general European war within a generation, this time via “the backdoor” with Japan.  A second US intervention, making the war global, could not have come about had there been no WWI, or if that war had ended on better terms.

After the Second World War, the US emerged as the world’s dominant power with bases across the globe and entered into a string of never ending hot and cold wars, regime changes, destabilizations, assassinations, bombings, blockades, and economic sanctions that have continued to this very day and hour.  Quickly after the war’s conclusion, the American media, academia, and the security and military industrial complex had to invent the myth that the Soviet Union and the US were of equal military might which turned out to be a blatant lie.  After being decimated in WWII and its adherence to unworkable and economic destructive socialistic planning, the Soviet Union could never produce the wealth necessary to maintain a global empire as the US did, and still does.  The “Soviet threat” was always a ruse to get gullible Americans to vote for and support greater and greater “defense” spending.

Besides Ron Paul and to a far lesser extent his son, Donald Trump was the only viable candidate who spoke of taking a new, less interventionist foreign policy which is why he was able to garner so much support from millions of empire-weary Americans during the presidential campaign.  He rightly called the Iraqi War a “disaster,” spoke of getting along with Russia, and the US’s commitment to NATO should be rethought, among other refreshing comments on foreign affairs.

In one of the most memorable and hopeful passages of his Inaugural Address, the new president championed non-intervention abroad:

We will seek friendship and goodwill with the nations of the world, but we do so with the understanding that it is the right of all nations to put their own interests first. We do not seek to impose our way of life on anyone, but rather to let it shine as an example. We will shine for everyone to follow.

Unlike Ron Paul, however, Trump had no grounding in a true America First foreign policy.  While critical of his predecessors’ foreign policy decisions, Trump was not opposed philosophically to the US Empire or saw it as the greatest threat to world peace which currently exists.

Without an ideological basis against American globalism, Trump was easy pickings against the threats and machinations of the Deep State.  Without a refutation of the ideology which drove Wilson and all of his successors to promote military adventurism abroad, Trump will be little different than his imperial predecessors and with a personality that is thin-skinned, impulsive and unpredictable, Trump could, God forbid, become another Woodrow Wilson.

 

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13 Comments
kokoda - the most deplorable
kokoda - the most deplorable
April 19, 2017 9:59 am

Except Woodrow didn’t have to contend with other nations having Nuclear weapons, and it seems as though our arrogant leaders have long ago not considered those same Nuclear weapons.

Satan II and Dong Feng 5 – yeah, they will back down from US intimidation.

CCRider
CCRider
April 19, 2017 10:18 am

I think there are some similarities between the two dictators, one in fact and one in training. The headstrong Wilson, like Trump had a strong vision for the U.S. and zero principles. He carried out his vision with an iron fist. Lincoln had unleashed his most dictatorial impulses. Wilson poured down a reign of terror on anyone criticizing the war. He locked up people for simply reading German. He had conscientious objectors tortured to death in Leavenworth. Will Trump follow this lead? Too soon to tell but worth sweating it out. Wilson’s Rasputin was Colonel House-a tool of the banksters of the day. Trump is up to his neck in Goldman Sackers. Wilson talked peace while turning existing hostilities into a conflagration that would sweep through the 20th century. Trump with Syria and N Korea in the nuclear age? Maybe we’re going to have that ‘war to end all wars’ after all.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 19, 2017 10:58 am

Any bets on which, global war resulting in the collapse of empire or US civil war will destroy the Republic first?

The American Cold Civil War
http://www.rooshv.com/the-american-cold-civil-war

There are four outcomes that can proceed from the juncture of which we stand. The first is a globalist resurgence at the polls thanks to demographic changes that push the vote far to the left, starting in 2024. If this happens, we will have a president that is more authoritarian than Hillary Clinton. The boot will come down on all facets of American life, especially speech, and we will essentially be living in an open-air prison.

The second outcome is a hot war where we win. The country will be ravaged and millions will die, but at least most of the deaths will be leftists.

The third option is a hot war where we lose because of foreign involvement. Not only are we much more likely to die in this engagement, but the globalist boot will come down with such a viciousness that those on the right who survive may hope that they had died in the war.

And the fourth option is the long divorce, one that we will easily win if the recommendations I made above are taken. Very few people die and life can proceed with high stability and prosperity for the majority of the country.

PJT
PJT
  Anonymous
April 22, 2017 12:37 pm

It seems to me that you omitted/overlooked another option/alternative; i.e., (economic) “competition” vs. (military) “confrontation”. I fail to find “equivalence” between wealth creation (innovation) and wealth destruction (war). WHY ALWAYS the singular Nation-State “choices” of only domination v. subjugation?, the “win v. lose” scenario? What has happened to cause “Win-Win” (for ALL!) to disappear from discussion?

flash
flash
April 19, 2017 11:26 am

Divorces looks good to me.
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BL
BL
April 19, 2017 12:40 pm

FLASH are you saying you are not happy in Trumpghanistan? Starfcker says he (Trump) is working on a big plan, hang on.

flash
flash
  BL
April 19, 2017 1:56 pm

Have you heard Bob Dylan is a Joo ?…who could’ve known?

BL
BL
  flash
April 19, 2017 2:01 pm

Yes FLASH, a joo that makes the goy Christmas albums of which you love so much. I’ll bet you play them year round while you wait for Trump to accomplish something besides war.

flash
flash
  BL
April 19, 2017 7:21 pm

Trump will set you free ball licker …you just have to believe.

Penforce
Penforce
April 19, 2017 12:43 pm

We win? History documents those celebrating the wars end. They’re celebrating the end, not the win, not the killing, not the destruction. There may be four scenarios, but I can assure you that the score looks like this. Wins: 0

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
April 19, 2017 1:47 pm

“The “Soviet threat” was always a ruse to get gullible Americans to vote for and support greater and greater “defense” spending.”

Whoa, careful there Jimmy boy. You’ll give SSS a heart attack!

BL
BL
April 19, 2017 1:57 pm

Quick….Somebody find Spooky a clue so he will no longer be clueless. 🙂

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
April 19, 2017 5:25 pm

Without the 17th amendment it would have been far more difficult to declare war. When the Senators were subjected to the tyranny of the mob through direct democracy instead of the deliberation of the legislatures everything got much easier for the Banksters.
With the income tax and federal reserve act the way was clear for Fiat funded wars of nearly unlimited destructive capacity. There were many clever ways around gold but with a senate appointed by 48 states inhabited by so many different people it would have been hard to pull it off.