1. Opposition to wars and interventions -- 2. From the early republic to the Spanish-American War -- 3. The Great War and World War II -- 4. Arguments in the Cold War and Post-Cold War eras -- 5. Ron Paul : the importance of natural order -- 6. Noam Chomsky : hegemony and manufactured consent -- 7. Chalmers Johnson : the military empire -- 8. Comparisons, analysis and conclusions.
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What arguments have critics of American wars and interventions put forward, and what arguments do they currently employ? Thomas Jefferson, Henry Thoreau, John Calhoun, the Anti-Imperialist League, Herbert Hoover, Charles Lindbergh, Martin Luther King Jr., and Ron Paul (among others) have criticized proposals to intervene in other countries, enter wars, acquire foreign territory, and engage in a forward defense posture. Despite cogent objections, they have also generally lost the argument. Why do they lose? This book provides answers to these questions through a survey of oppositional arguments over time, augmented by the views of contemporary critics, including those of Ron Paul, Chalmers Johnson and Noam Chomsky. Author David J. Lorenzo demonstrates how and why a significant number of arguments are dismissed as irrelevant, unpatriotic, overly pessimistic, or radically out of the mainstream. Other lines of reasoning might provide a compelling critique of wars and interventions from a wide variety of perspectives - and still lose.