Tag: Versailles Conference

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Living Under the Spectre of Hyperinflation: 1923 Weimar and Today
History
Living Under the Spectre of Hyperinflation: 1923 Weimar and Today
November 5, 2019

Whether London will manage to succeed in 2020 pushing a fascist de-carbonization (ie: depopulation) scheme onto the world where their 1920 Monster failed remains to be seen.

Woodrow Wilson Goes to Europe: One Hundred Years of Delusional American Madness
December 22, 2018

Every US president really believes that the United States is unique in history and fated to remake the entire world in its own image.

Woodrow Wilson Goes to Europe: One Hundred Years of Delusional American Madness
History
With Regard to War, Trump Doesn’t Talk the Talk or Walk the Walk
History
With Regard to War, Trump Doesn’t Talk the Talk or Walk the Walk
November 18, 2018

One hundred years after the end of World War I, we should all have progressed to a point where we no longer pay heed to the Trumps, Bannons, and others who find always find blame in “the other.”

Trump’s Jaded View of Two World Wars
November 11, 2018

Donald Trump took to Paris some “personal baggage” that strongly suggested he wanted nothing to do with Macron’s peace forum, a conference at which 70 leaders were present.

Trump’s Jaded View of Two World Wars
World
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Reparations from the World War II. Stalin’s Generous Gesture
World
Reparations from the World War II. Stalin’s Generous Gesture
May 7, 2015

Of all the harm inflicted on all the Allied countries (the Soviet Union, United States, Great Britain, and France) during the Second World War, approximately half occurred in the USSR…At the Yalta Conference in February 1945, Stalin suggested that Germany pay a total of $20 billion in reparations, anticipating that half of that sum ($10 billion) would go to the Soviet Union – the country that had made the greatest contribution to the victory and endured more than any of the other nations in the anti-Hitler coalition. With some conditions, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill agreed to Josef Stalin’s suggestion…In fact, the German reparations that the USSR agreed to accept would barely provide compensation for a mere 8% of the direct damages inflicted upon the Soviets. And the costs of only 2.8% of the total damages were recouped. This appeared to be a generous gesture on Stalin’s part.