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This 4 page paper abstracts the first five chapters of Henry Paoluccis' book, War, Peace and The Presidency. Additional analysis on the causes of World Wars one and two. Bibliography lists 1 source.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MBplcis.rtf
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the arena with an in-depth examination of the Presidency, the nation at war, and the nation as it is during peace times. The first five chapters of his book are
abstracted in the following paper. CHAPTER ONE Alexis de Tocqueville was not an American. He never would claim citizenship in the United States. Yet, as a young man traveling across
the newly formed country called America he was so captivated at the young countrys achievements that he would write a dissertation (in two volumes) which are still considered to be
one of the most definitive observations about early America and the spirit of Democracy. His motive, among others, was to determine why America of all places was able to make
democracy work for them. This chapter examines many of the curious factors inherent in the American political scene and its policies. In particular there seemed to be the quandary over
the popular vote, the warring partisan factors, the apparent shifting loyalties by candidates, and the intellectually induced social order of the 1960s. CHAPTER TWO This chapter suggests that at
the time of the writing of the book (1968) that there is an ideological crisis which was vaguely reminiscent of the factors leading up to the Civil War. The vast
power of the individual states was making them reluctant to accept federal regulations, and making most fear that the unrest that was growing in the cities was going to lead
to war. A discussion of World War II as being the last good war is examined and it is suggested that what was meant by this was that mankind had
developed the technology to do vastly higher damage to himself than ever before and that the reasons for going to war have become convoluted. Though many of the founding
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