Those who were old enough to remember Sept. 11 vow to never forget what happened that day. But the next generation, it seems, already has-- or never knew to begin with.
When asked by the Young Americas Foundation what caused 9/11, many students at George Mason University in northern Virginia had no clue, gave vague responses, or were just flat out wrong.
When you take this level of ignorance combined with the fact that at many colleges across the country students are now being taught that the US is to blame for 9/11, the next generation may actually grow up believing this to be true. And this in turn will lead to a whole new generation of anti-American leftists.
The blame for this, however, cannot rest solely on the students. It is the responsibility of the countrys education system, the media, and parents to teach kids American historypast and present.
It was part of the policy of dealing with Soviet Communism through containment. Korea was first,then Vietnam. "
Containment of communism was the stated reason.
IMHO, the real objective was to weaken the U.S. by draining us of blood, treasure, and our will, bog us down in unwinnable wars, and divide us politically internally.
To establish the NWO and to get the US involved, the US had to be broken down. At the conclusion of WWII, the US was the lone superpower. Being the superpower, not likely the US would go along with the NWO. So, the US had to be weakened. Both of those wars were steps in that process.
IMHO, the real objective was to weaken the U.S. by draining us of blood, treasure, and our will, bog us down in unwinnable wars, and divide us politically internally.
If you read some of what are now considered "old right" folks like Robert Taft and George Malone during the early years of the cold war you find warnings about that. Even guys like Eisenhower and Keenan had an idea of the danger, and some of the air power advocates like LeMay and deSeversky warned about the danger in matching the USSR across the board in military capability. They seemed to have an idea of strategy, rather than just throwing resources at a problem.