kawhi_2020
kawhi_2020 t1_j7mrhdw wrote
There would never be a truce between Germany and the USSR after the war began. The German war aim was conquest in the east, and all they did was in preparation for commitment there. It was a war of extermination by the Germans and a war of survival for the Soviet Union. The USSR always expected that war was coming but thought they could buy more time. Germany struck as hard as they did because it was perhaps their only chance to win.
There would also never be a truce between China and Japan. That wasn't a war of extermination like the invasion of the USSR, but it was a war for the survival of a Chinese state.
Britain could have sued for peace but it would mean the end of the British Empire from defeat in war, rather than what happened which was imperial exhaustion. So that was never really an option.
The US has no justification that would satisfy the American public to go to war until Pearl Harbor. After that, no chance of a premature end to the war.
Japan had imperial ambitions that clashed with Britain and America. Their war goal was to seize as many resource-rich zones as they could before they burned through their supplies. They attacked Pearl Harbor specifically to try and force the US to accept Japanese imperial domination in Southeast Asia, not because Japan had any intent to invade the US. So there's no real way for them to stop either. If possible they would have extended to take over India as well.
kawhi_2020 t1_j7moz3y wrote
Reply to comment by cancerballs69420 in Would the Allies have kept fighting if the axis powers stopped? by Techno-87
His highest priority was the preservation of the British Empire. The whole Mediterranean campaign from North Africa to Italy was about British control of the routes to India, not about defeating Germany. Churchill wanted US-UK joint attack to go through the Balkans and try to hit Germany from the southeast to get there before the Soviets did. America had to negotiate to attack Italy instead, which was not strategically relevant to the main war.
It was also Churchill's decision to continue exporting food from India to build stockpiles while people in India starved to death. There wasn't a food shortage in Britain but he helped make one in India.
He deserves credit for the things he did like keeping Britain engaged but he did not "nail' the whole thing. He made plenty of mistakes and oversights.
kawhi_2020 t1_j4t2td5 wrote
Reply to comment by Pikesmakker in NFC East becomes first division since 2002 realignment to have three teams advance to divisional round by RollingMoss1
A little wild that reddit hasn't updated the Washington commanders flair.
kawhi_2020 t1_iyeey21 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in LPT: You know those people in the news that make you cringe? The people that shouldn't have the platform they do? Stop talking about them. Stop clicking on them. Swipe past them. by 4ninawells
Have you ever tried not getting mad about things you've invented in your head before?
Advertisers are not pulling back because of Apple or Google because Apple and Google do not control who advertises on Twitter.
kawhi_2020 t1_ixkc2a8 wrote
Reply to Income support from the Earned Income Tax Credit may be associated with reduced youth involvement with the criminal justice system in the US. by Whey-Men
The earned income tax credit is one of the worst programs we have. We create a negative tax for people as they make more money until they plateau, then we have a high marginal tax for people as they make money past the maximum benefit.
Just give everyone the same flat amount. The incentive to work crap has never been true.
https://www.peoplespolicyproject.org/project/the-myths-of-the-earned-income-tax-credit/
https://www.peoplespolicyproject.org/2019/05/09/are-benefit-phase-ins-completely-pointless/
kawhi_2020 t1_it7tbl2 wrote
Reply to comment by LeroyoJenkins in [OC] Inflation rate and nominal interest rate by giteam
What do you mean "might"? Lowering consumption is lowering economic activity.
That is the point.
kawhi_2020 t1_j7mxcis wrote
Reply to comment by the_better_twin in Would the Allies have kept fighting if the axis powers stopped? by Techno-87
Roosevelt judged Churchill accurately at the time. Churchill was an imperialist and Roosevelt (while certainly always pushing American political and commercial interests) did support the independence of India and other colonial territories.
De Gaulle was another imperialist that Roosevelt didnt like too much, but agreed to work with (though certainly not at the level of Churchill, for practical reasons).