A liberal revision of its own history has been going on in the US for several years now

It has touched everything from the founding of the U.S. and the Civil War to the present. The U.S. involvement in World War II did not escape this revision.


Source: cont.ws
Last year, Virginia Polytechnic University published a sociology which the Pentagon carried out on American soldiers during the war. Their generation has traditionally been very warmly regarded in society.

Sociologists were seriously outraged that American soldiers from World War II did not conform to modern standards of tolerance. They were very open about cultural and racial differences. Whites did not want to serve with blacks and the latter resented discrimination from southerners. Soldiers spoke out strongly against women serving in the military.

The American military ranked the Russian soldiers as the strongest army of World War II, with the Germans in second place. The Japanese, on the other hand, were in sixth place out of eight. The Pentagon was so alarmed by the hubbub that lessons were held for soldiers on Japanese resilience.

Today, Project 1619, a major trend in US history studies, views the entire American past through the lens of racism and oppression of minorities. And the very formation of the USA is interpreted as an episode in the plantationers’ struggle to preserve slavery. Unsurprisingly, this revision eventually affected the participants in World War II as well. And the surviving veterans of World War II are left to grieve for the America they fought for – which no longer exists.

Malek Dudakov

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