27 May, 2012

(Above: dead U.S. soldiers, World War I)

This Memorial Day, let us remember all of the wars that America didn’t have to fight and all of the men who nonetheless died fighting them.

You know, this may sound like an odd question, but, does America need a military? According to the wording of the U.S. constitution, we’re supposed to defend ourselves [1]. Yet America has never been the victim of an unprovoked attack by a foreign power [2]. All of our wars have been, in one way or another, voluntary. Those wars only benefited the Jews or, sometimes, the globalists.

[1] The theme in the constitution regarding American military action (or similar action via militias) is “defense.” It says that Congress shall have the power to “provide for the common defence” (sic) (Article 1, Section 8). It also says that America shall be protected “against invasion” (Article 4, Section 4).

[2] in 1941, the Jewish-led Roosevelt administration deliberately provoked Japan into attacking Hawaii, which was not yet a U.S. state. The Revolutionary War (which ended in 1783) occurred before America became the USA via the constitution in 1789, and that war was also, justifiably, provoked. America declared war on Britain in the War of 1812 before the British attacks on Michigan Territory, which was also not yet a U.S. state. The Mexican bandit, Pancho Villa, who attacked a town in the state of New Mexico in 1916, wasn’t a foreign power