• @PugJesusOP
    link
    English
    3
    edit-2
    1 month ago

    Prunebutt is right here: the US was, at best, laissez-faire about Nazis until it wasn’t.

    Oh, I guess I must have imagined the Roosevelt administration being stridently anti-Nazi from the beginning, and the mass protests whenever Nazis showed up in the US. Silly me.

    • @JayleneSlide
      link
      21 month ago

      Oh, I guess I must have imagined the Roosevelt administration being stridently anti-Nazi from the beginning, and the mass protests whenever Nazis showed up in the US. Silly me.

      You are correct that you are imagining this, because the US’ relationship to Germany was definitely complex. Roosevelt was far from “stridently anti-Nazi” until Kristallnacht (1938 Nov 9), at which point Roosevelt recalled the US ambassador to Germany and allowed the 12,000 visiting Germans to remain in the US. However, despite allowing those Germans to stay, he did not push to increase immigration quotas.

      Prior to Kristallnacht, the Roosevelt administration, Hollywood, petroleum companies, and much of the manufacturing base were very pro-Nazi Germany. The administration assisted Germany in circumventing boycotts while US petroleum companies provided fuel and oil despite European sanctions. Sources: Robert Evans (“Behind the Bastards”), Rafael Medoff (“Roosevelt’s Pre-war Attitude Toward the Nazis”)

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      -51 month ago

      Oh, I guess I must have imagined

      Well, I guess you must have been there, if you didn’t imagine it. /s

      Clarification: that was a joke and not supposed to be a proper addition to the argument.

      • Todd Bonzalez
        link
        fedilink
        51 month ago

        You sure are spending a lot of energy defending literal Nazis. Unless you have an actual point to make, you might want it considering shutting the fuck up.