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5 pages in length. While President Wilson may have been embroiled in a great number of situations abroad that offered the president myriad opportunities to address American foreign policy, he was not as antiwar as he led everyone to believe. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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conflict" (Rosenberg, 1995, p. 139) among capitalist leaders, it eventually came to incite "a series of huge blows" (p. 139) that would endanger the very presence of capitalism as it
existed in Europe during that period. The grave combination of "senseless slaughter and deepening economic exhaustion" (Rosenberg, 1995, p. 139) took a substantial toll on European politics, which created
a tremendous sense of governmental insecurity throughout all of Europe. Eric Hobsbawm, author of The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991, claims that such political insecurity "swept
away all regimes from Vladivostok to the Rhine" (Hobsbawm, 1995, p. 67), which originated in Central Europe. Because of the outcome, capitalism was now forced to endure both domestic
and international jeopardy with regard to its current status. States Hobsbawm: "The tragedy of the October Revolution was precisely that it could only produce its kind of ruthless, brutal,
command socialism" (Hobsbawm, 1995, p. 498). At the time of World War I, totalitarianism was taking a stronghold upon Europe, while the Great Depression proved to threaten the "nature
and destiny of the Western civilization" (Anonymous, 2000, Ortega). In the midst of all this turmoil, Rosa Luxemburg wrote: "Capitalist society faces a dilemma -- either an advance to
Socialism or a reversion to barbarism" (Rosenberg, 1995, p. 139). Capitalism was at the forefront of crisis that came to be known as
World War I. Of the primary players that subjected Europe to such a dismal state, there was not one in particular that stood out as more detrimental than the
next; rather, as each one occurred -- often on the heels of one previously -- it created a catastrophic domino influence upon an already damaged European system. Acting as
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