Great Wars and Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal

The great historian of classical liberalism strips away the veneer of exalted leaders and beloved wars. Professor Ralph Raico shows them to be wolves in sheep’s clothing and their wars as attacks on human liberty and human rights. In the backdrop of this blistering and deeply insightful and scholarly history is the whitewashing of “great leaders” like Woodrow Wilson, Winston Churchill, FDR, Truman, Stalin, Trotsky, and other collectivists. They are highly regarded because they were on the “right side” of the rise of the state. But do they deserve adulation? Raico says no: these great leaders were main agents in the decline of civilization in the 20th century, all of them anti-liberals who used their power to celebrate and enhance state power. Robert Higgs writes the introduction and cheers this powerful expose as a necessary corrective. “For Ralph Raico,” writes Robert Higgs in the foreword, “it would be not only unseemly but foolish to quiver obsequiously in the historical presence of a Churchill, a Roosevelt, or a Truman. He knows when he has encountered a politician who lusted after power and public adulation, and he describes the man accordingly. He does not sweep under the rug the crimes committed by the most publicly revered Western political leaders. If they ordered or acceded to the commission of mass murder, he tells us, without mincing words, that they did so. The idea that the United States has invariably played the role of savior or ‘good guy’ in its international relations Raico recognizes as state propaganda, rather than honest history. “Thus, in these pages, you will find descriptions and accounts of World War I, of the lead-up to formal U.S. belligerence in World War II, and of Churchill, Roosevelt, and Truman, among others, that bear little resemblance to what you were taught in school. Here you will encounter, perhaps for the first time, compelling evidence of how the British maneuvered U.S. leaders and tricked the American people prior to the U.S. declarations of war in 1917 and 1941. You will read about how the British undertook to starve the Germans – men, women, and children alike – not only during World War I, but for the greater part of a year after the armistice. You will be presented with descriptions of how the communists were deified and the German people demonized by historians and others who ought to have known better. You will see painted in truer shades a portrait of the epic confrontation between the great majority of Americans who wished to keep their country at peace in 1939, 1940, and 1941 and the well-placed, unscrupulous minority who sought to plunge the United States into the European maelstrom. “Raico’s historical essays are not for the faint of heart or for those whose loyalty to the U.S. or British state outweighs their devotion to truth and humanity. Yet Ralph did not invent the ugly facts he recounts here, as his ample documentation attests. Indeed, many historians have known these facts, but few have been willing to step forward and defy politically popular and professionally fashionable views in the forthright, pull-no-punches way that Raico does. The historians’ principal defect for the most part has not been a failure or refusal to dig out the relevant facts, but rather a tendency to go along to get along in academia and ‘respectable’ society, a sphere in which individual honesty and courage generally count against a writer or teacher, whereas capitulation to trendy nonsense often brings great rewards and professional acclaim.” Table of Contents Foreword by Robert Higgs Introduction I Essays World War I: The Turning Point Rethinking Churchill Harry S. Truman: Advancing the Revolution Marxist Dreams and Soviet Realities Nazifying the Germans II Reviews Trotsky: The Ignorance and the Evil The Two “Testaments” of American Foreign Policy The Other Ward that Never Ends Starving a People into Submission John T. Flynn and the Apotheosis of Franklin Roosevelt On the Brink of Wo…

3 Replies to “Great Wars and Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal”

  1. WOW!!! Tremendously well written collection of essays. Raico is a master and pulls no punches. He is consistent in his indictment of both the modern left and right, and shines light on the vacuum in American politics once occupied by the non-interventionist Old Right. There is not much to say that has not already been well covered in the other Amazon reviews. Highly educational, extremely interesting, and capable of shattering world views. I would recommend this book to the following:Anyone…

  2. Let’s be Honest: Churchill was a War Lover Ralph Raico’s book is divided into two parts, the first presents his essays and the second part gives reviews of others work.There is a fifty page essay on Churchill that pretty much destroys the commonly held view that this was the “man of many centuries.” Later in the book a chapter on the Nazifying of Germany shows how easy it has been for those wishing to kill off western civilization to extrapolate hatred of Germans to hatred of all white nations, this leading to the…

  3. Surprising, horrifying The book covers a lot of topics without going into tons of detail, but the footnotes show where you can go digging for more detail if you’re interested. Chapters 1 – 3 constitute the meat of the book (WWI, Churchill, and Truman). The last Chapters (4-12) are short and cover various topics lightly but in a very interesting way. I’m left feeling like I don’t know enough about the topics to feel fully informed.I am really glad to see that there are books about war that don’t glorify…

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