Figures.
NEW YORK — A letter from Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy to the secretary of President Franklin D. Roosevelt expressing doubts about going to war against Hitler was among nine documents the National Archives released this week.
Oh, the pinnacle of propaganda can't like that!
A month after the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939, Kennedy, the US ambassador in London, voiced his reluctance about “this war for idealism’’ against Hitler.
“I can’t see any use in everybody in Europe going busted and having Communism run riot,’’ Kennedy wrote to Marguerite LeHand, Roosevelt’s personal secretary. “My own belief is that the economics of Germany would have taken care of Hitler long ago before this if he didn’t have a chance to wave that flag every once in a while.
“But, of course,’’ he added, “one isn’t supposed to say this out loud.’’
Yeah, he knew.
Kennedy’s letter presaged his further public disparagement of the war and the future of democracy — comments that, along with his efforts to arrange a conciliatory meeting with Hitler, forced him to resign as ambassador in 1940....
When you find one that is functioning right now get back to me.
And then they killed his son when he became president.
Also see:
Judea Declares War on Germany
Whassat?
Also see: The Jewish Declaration of War on Nazi Germany
The Zionist War on Nazi Germany
The Holocaust Before It Happened
Historian - 'Did Hitler Have Reason To Hate The Jews?'
That's not the way my AmeriKan MSM remembers it.