Allen Young

Why Germany lost WWI: Cause of modern Western neoliberalism, danger of China


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https://youtu.be/EEeMatCq57A
After
several
centuries
of
discriminating
and
exploiting
non-white
peoples
across
the
entire
world,
something
very
different
emerged
in
the
West
mainly
due
to
the
pushback
from
the
non-White
peoples
and
the
western
need
for
a
new
means
to
broaden
its
influence
and
dominance
and
leadership
in
the
entire
world;
neoliberalism,
anti-racism,
desegregation,
integration,
and
non-white
immigration
transpired
in
the
West,
both
in
Europe
and
in
North
America.
I'm
beginning
to
think
that
if
Adolf
Hitler
did
not
push
white
racism
to
the
uttermost
extremes
in
his
Nazism,
neoliberalism
probably
would
not
have
happened
in
the
West.
The
British
and
the
Anglo-Americans
who
were
overt
racists
started
to
step
back
from
overt
racism
after
the
defeat
of
the
Nazi
Germany,
not
before,
because
what
they
fought
against
had
to
be
bad
in
some
way,
and
they
couldn't
be
just
like
whom
they
stood
against.
I
think
Adolf
Hitler
wanted
to
be
like
or
better
than
the
British
and
the
Anglo-Americans
who
had
the
most
power
and
dominance
and
influence
in
the
world
at
the
time,
so
Adolf
Hitler
pushed
white
racism
and
eugenics
to
the
uttermost
extremes,
which
were
the
British
and
Anglo-American
idea
and
practice
and
institution
long
before
Adolf
Hitler;
in
that
sense,
Adolf
Hitler
was
a
copycat
of
the
British
and
the
Anglo-Americans
who
wanted
to
outdo
his
models
and
idols
in
their
own
game,
which
inadvertantly
pushed
the
British
and
the
Anglo-Americans
to
step
back
from
their
traditional
path
of
white
conservatism,
nativism,
and
protectionism.
I
wanted
to
re-exam
the
cause
of
the
rise
of
Adolf
Hitler,
which
was
the
defeat
of
Germany
in
WWI.
Adolf
Hitler
openly
favored
Germany
becoming
the
most
powerful
state
in
the
world
with
the
most
superior
race
of
people;
but
for
the
German
voters
at
the
time,
what
mattered
the
most
was
the
German
economy;
the
racial
superiority
was
an
icing
on
the
cake,
because
it
was
the
German
economy
that
really
mattered
at
the
time,
which
had
detrimental
inflation
and
over
30%
of
unemployment
rate.
So,
why
did
Germany
lose
in
WWI?
It's
a
well-known
fact
that
the
Germans
blamed
the
German
Jews
for
their
loss
in
WWI.
Before
the
Nazi
rise
to
power,
Jews
represented
less
than
1%
of
Germany's
population.
If
the
German
Jews,
less
than
1%
of
Germany's
population
at
the
time,
could
really
cause
Germany
to
lose
in
WWI
because
they
wanted
to,
that
would've
been
a
superhuman
achievement;
if
the
German
Jews
were
the
top
1%
of
Germany
at
the
time
economically
and
politically,
it
might
have
been
possible
for
the
German
Jews
to
determine
the
national
fate
of
Germany,
but
certainly
it
was
the
Germans
who
were
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Allen YoungBy Allen Young