
War Is a Racket
Adam Parfrey
(Introduction by)Description
Smedley Butler's frank speech describing his role as a soldier as nothing more
than serving as a puppet for big-business interests. The introduction discusses
why General Butler went against the corporate war machine and how he exposed a
fascist coup d'etat plot against President Franklin Roosevelt. Widely
appreciated and referenced by left- and right-wingers alike, this is an extraordinary
argument against war - more relevant now than ever.
notorious 1932 anti-war book The Horror of It by Frederick A. Barber and two
never-before-published anti-interventionist essays by General Butler.
Product Details
Publisher | Feral House |
Publish Date | August 01, 2003 |
Pages | 80 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780922915866 |
Dimensions | 8.2 X 5.5 X 0.2 inches | 0.2 pounds |
Reviews
-- James J. Martin
"Butler is scathing in his description of how the U.S. government wasted the lives of those soldiers who died but also of those who survived... A stunning condemnation of U.S. militarism and it ends with a demand that rings true down to today - 'To hell with war.'"
-- Ashley Smith, Socialist Worker
"America had seen its own attempt at a Fascist coup. Why, then, is this incident in U.S. history not better known? Why don't children learn in school about the plot to seize the United States government?... The time has obviously come for Smedley Butler to have his moment in the sun. Butler's attack on the military-industrial complex does more than expose war for the racket it is: It also gives the antiwar movement unmatched credibility."-- Ken Mondschein, corporatemofo.com
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