The Germans said they would try to keep the US neutral in a political message. However, historical commentators have said (as I have shown) that Germany knew that the US would enter the war.
Keep posting “evidence” that doesn’t actually support the claims you make. Perhaps you will get lucky and find one that puts our arguments on equal footing. But mine is already firmly established as sound. You can possibly tie, but you can’t win. And no amount of money you spend, people you bully, or evidence you ignore will change that.
What you posted is nothing that helps you. But this is how you work, ask for “links” then when it goes against you, just move on and never address why the information says this.
Quote from: Imperious Leader on January 10, 2013, 06:24:00 pm
Quote
Not necessarily. USW was taking its toll on Britain. The note was a gamble that would get the US involved sooner than USW inevitably would have. See previous posts for the sources (and below). I really have no responsibility to repost what you ignore.
You don’t gamble unless you have to.
I’m inclined to agree. Britain had to gamble that the note would get the USA in the war earlier than USW was already going to do on its own. So yes, you don’t need to gamble unless you have to, but in this case, Britain gambled to SPEED the US entry. They would have entered anyways. No matter how many times you “cite” common knowledge or what you read in school one time, the actual evidence will keep slapping your unfounded claims around.
The information concludes that the US would not have entered based on the information you ignore and choose to ignore. You have been defeated, just surrender and you will feel better about yourself. And whats this school thing?
Quote from: Imperious Leader on January 10, 2013, 06:24:00 pm
You posted crap. No source you could ever find will say “it is 100% true that the USW would have drawn the US into war and bringing up the note was not needed.”
Then why did those sources say that USW made US entry inevitable? Just because it shows how Imperiously Wrong you are (see what I did there?) doesn’t make it “crap.”
The information shows both Wilson and the British did not feel they could not make the note known because public support for war was not gaining. So get over it.
Quote from: Imperious Leader on January 10, 2013, 06:24:00 pm
The note brought the US finally into the war which is an indisputable fact. Get over it.
But you also claimed that USW would not have been enough on its own (not to mention other unsupportable claims). The historical sources firmly state otherwise. Get over that. And I didn’t just read that in school one time. I read it from several historical sources.
You read from comic books and since you are still in school, stay in school.
Quote
Besides, the real reason you are right(rolleyes) is because you “remember in school something that you read saying this.” � rolleyes I read some interesting things about classmates written in the bathroom stalls, perhaps that’s where you read that tidbit at school?� �
Quote from: Imperious Leader on January 10, 2013, 06:24:00 pm
The note triggered the war, get over it.
Did you “remember in school something that you read saying this?” Or do you just keep repeating the note trigger comment over and over again because it is the 1% (a guess, I haven’t measured) of your total posting in this thread that might have some real evidentiary basis (assuming that when you say the note triggered the war that is the same as saying it was the last straw)?
What? I think you got rabies. The note triggered the war, get over it.
People who keep saying the same thing over and over and who can’t ever admit they are wrong tend to be in need of psychiatric help. Or at least I “remember in school something that I read saying this”
What? OK.
Quote from: Imperious Leader on January 10, 2013, 06:37:01 pm
http://www.loyno.edu/~history/journal/1990-1/guichet.htm
Quote
However, without knowledge of the Germans, British Naval Intelligence had, since the outbreak of war in 1915, been working to break the German military code used to send information across the globe. On January 17, 1917, having already broken the code, the telegram was intercepted and ciphering work began. Specialists Reverend William Montgomery and Nigel de Grey, hired by the English to aid in the deciphering of codes intercepted from the Germans, looked over the paper without knowing that the key to the war’s deadlock lay concealed within. <12> Once deciphered, the importance in mobilizing sentiment in America in favor of the war was immediately recognized by the British. <13> The United States, having no knowledge of the telegram or its contents, continued attempts to bring the European powers to a peaceful settlement to end the war.
Quote
This action, however, failed to bring about a favorable response from the American public. On February 19, President Wilson disclosed to the French philosopher, Henri Bergson, that Americans were still badly divided, and that many Westerners were for peace at any price. <18> British reports of American opinion also showed very clearly the widespread reluctance to fight Germany. <19> It was this lack of support that created difficulty for Wilson in deciding on a course of action. In response to the sinking of the Housatonic and the Lyman M. Law, Wilson appealed to Congress on February 26 for authority “to supply our merchant ships with defensive arms, should that become necessary, and with the means of using them.” <20> Concerned that the public fear of war may lead to the decline of his request, the President stated within his appeal, “I am not now proposing or contemplating war or any steps that need lead to it.” <21> This statement clearly expresses the fact that as of February 26, 1917, President Wilson did not feel that U.S. intervention in the War was inevitable, In addition, the strength of public opinion and that of the President’ s Cabinet is exemplified. Fearing such an armament would indeed closen the U.S. to the stage of entering the European war, a filibuster of the Senate was begun.
Ah but there is a difference between changing public opinion and the actual totality of the decision to go to war, is there not?
And that difference was the note, case closed.
Let’s not forget that Wilson’s willingness to avoid war and the historical inevitability of war once USW was redeclared ( the latter or which � is supported by the sources I have posted and still others) are separate notions. Is it quite possible that Wilson still wanted to or thought he had a chance to avoid war? Sure. But historical sources say it was inevitable as soon as USW was declared and maintained.
Lets not forget you have been wrong in nearly every claim you made and the truth finally shot down whatever you posted. The sources all say the war was triggered by the note, and all sides felt they needed to disclose the note because public opinion had not solidified against Germany due to USW. The facts support that claim and no other.
And if Wilson got the note on the 24th as we know, and still thought the US could stay out on the 26th, then why did it take this event ( quoted below) for Wilson to resolve to declare war? It seems that the note did have a lot to do with public opinion (as I already said), but it has even LESS to do with actually causing the war than our sources indicated before!
"In mid-march 1917, German U-boats sank three American merchant ships. Outraged about the violation of American neutrality, President Wilson called a meeting with his cabinet. Each cabinet member argued for war. On April 2, Wilson asked Congress to declare war on Germany to “make the world safe for democracy.”
-American Anthem, Holt-Rinehart-Winston, 2007
Whatever angle you try to take, you aren’t proving your point with actually corroborative evidence. It seems as though what you have really done is make the case that the note was not the final straw, but that that sinking of the three ships was, since Wilson still thought the US should stay out but resolved for war only after the sinking of those 3 ships (due to USW).
Yes keep posting that one source, i posted many others that show the war was triggered by the note, get over it.
You have done far more to argue against your main point about what was the last straw (a point which I earlier conceded as plausible) than I ever did. Argument suicide. It’s ugly even when I suppose I am the beneficiary.
But please, cite “something you remember reading in school” That will settle things.
You have done nothing but increase your post count. The note triggered the war, and you can’t even admit that. The sheer ignorance of reality you demonstrate of basic facts is lunacy. Now go walk your dog before he does a #2 on the floor again.