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  • AlexandairBabeuf [they/them]
    ·
    4 years ago

    UK and France

    then it'd hardly be WW2. the inter-imperial conflict aspect of WW2 was an intractable issue: no matter the affinity the western bourgeois had for the fascists, the fascists wanted a slice of their pie & the Wallies could never allow that.

    • Vncredleader
      ·
      4 years ago

      Yeah Churchill's sentiments about Germany highlight the sheer hatred the British had for the idea that the Germanic peoples could be masters of their own destiny. There was an intractable conflict there, it just was not over fascism. The British and French still wanted to fight against their actual fear, not fascism but the same thing they feared in WW1 despite the content of Germany being utterly changed

      http://www.metropostcard.com/picswar-7b/ww1-b-259-worldorder.jpg.jpg

      The self-conscious and embarrassed Germany that wanted "our place in the sun" was what the west hated, not the fact that they are fascists, but none the less it was an opposition