FDR- a disgrace at Yalta

Lincoln was our greatest President. Roosevelt saved capitalist “democracy,” played a key role in rallying the country during the Great Depression, led the country to defeat fascism and win WWII, and set the U.S. on the road to becoming the predominant world power.

Only historical ignoramuses today denounce these two truly great (but imperfect as all humans are) U.S. politicians. There are certainly many ignoramuses and few if any great politicians around today!
The OP apparently isn`t aware of that thing known to history as WW2. FDR should have given Stalin a lecture on communism? :laughing0301:
OP sees capitalism on shaky ground apparently. Is OP a closet commie?

America fought WW2 because of nazi atrocities. Why not let the Communists know that we don't approve of their atrocities either, while we were there?

The truth, for better or worse , is that Stalin killed more innocents than Hitler did.
 
Lincoln was our greatest President. Roosevelt saved capitalist “democracy,” played a key role in rallying the country during the Great Depression, led the country to defeat fascism and win WWII, and set the U.S. on the road to becoming the predominant world power.

Only historical ignoramuses today denounce these two truly great (but imperfect as all humans are) U.S. politicians. There are certainly many ignoramuses and few if any great politicians around today!
The OP apparently isn`t aware of that thing known to history as WW2. FDR should have given Stalin a lecture on communism? :laughing0301:
OP sees capitalism on shaky ground apparently. Is OP a closet commie?

America fought WW2 because of nazi atrocities. Why not let the Communists know that we don't approve of their atrocities either, while we were there?

The truth, for better or worse , is that Stalin killed more innocents than Hitler did.
By a YUGE margin
 
Kissing up to Uncle Joe Stalin, instead of using this ideal opportunity to give the Soviet Dictator a lecture on Freedom and to denounce communism.

Roosevelt would die a few months later, he was on his last legs, and he still maintained true to the Communists, refusing to denounce the the murders of millions of Ukrainians that Stalin slaughtered.

This was FDR's opportunity, he utterly failed.

And because of this, he should be cancelled, his monument dumped in the drink.

FDR was a disgrace period.
 
Kissing up to Uncle Joe Stalin, instead of using this ideal opportunity to give the Soviet Dictator a lecture on Freedom and to denounce communism.

Roosevelt would die a few months later, he was on his last legs, and he still maintained true to the Communists, refusing to denounce the the murders of millions of Ukrainians that Stalin slaughtered.

This was FDR's opportunity, he utterly failed.

And because of this, he should be cancelled, his monument dumped in the drink.

Though I disagree with most of your comments and your general political perspective, the linked article you provide on the Yalta Conference is fine. It accurately presents the unique wartime situation facing Roosevelt and Churchill in February 1945, one year before Churchill and Truman reversed course and recognized the Iron Curtain that had fallen across Europe. The article is hardly comprehensive, but it puts Yalta into context, and does so in a rather easy to understand manner.
 
lol another idiot thread.

Is the OP poster a micro-chipped puppet being controlled from Peking, sent to dumb down Americans with stupid baseless insane rubbish and making itself appear to be a right winger, but really just another false flag operative duping the morons here? I think so! Obviously a bot!
 
12 July 1944- Theodore Roosevelt Jr dies of a heart attack in France almost a month after landing on Utah Beach in the first wave of the D-DAY landings there. He was known to have both heart and arthritis issues prior to his WW2 service.
Roosevelt was the only general on D-Day to land by sea with the first wave of troops. At 56, he was the oldest man in the invasion, and the only one whose son also landed that day; Captain Quentin Roosevelt II was among the first wave of soldiers at Omaha Beach.
Brigadier General Roosevelt was one of the first soldiers, along with Captain Leonard T. Schroeder Jr., off his landing craft as he led the 8th Infantry Regiment and 70th Tank Battalion landing at Utah Beach. Roosevelt was soon informed that the landing craft had drifted south of their objective, and the first wave of men was a mile off course. Walking with the aid of a cane and carrying a pistol, he personally made a reconnaissance of the area immediately to the rear of the beach to locate the causeways that were to be used for the advance inland. He returned to the point of landing and contacted the commanders of the two battalions, Lieutenant Colonels Conrad C. Simmons and Carlton O. MacNeely, and coordinated the attack on the enemy positions confronting them. Opting to fight from where they had landed rather than trying to move to their assigned positions, Roosevelt's famous words were, "We'll start the war from right here!"
These impromptu plans worked with complete success and little confusion. With artillery landing close by, each follow-on regiment was personally welcomed on the beach by a cool, calm, and collected Roosevelt, who inspired all with humor and confidence, reciting poetry and telling anecdotes of his father to steady the nerves of his men. Roosevelt pointed almost every regiment to its changed objective. Sometimes he worked under fire as a self-appointed traffic cop, untangling traffic jams of trucks and tanks all struggling to get inland and off the beach.
By modifying his division's original plan on the beach, Roosevelt enabled its troops to achieve their mission objectives by coming ashore and attacking north behind the beach toward its original objective. Years later, Omar Bradley was asked to name the single most heroic action he had ever seen in combat. He replied, "Ted Roosevelt on Utah Beach."
Roosevelt was originally recommended for the Distinguished Service Cross by General Barton. The recommendation was upgraded at higher headquarters to the Medal of Honor, which was approved, and which Roosevelt was posthumously awarded on 21 September 1944.
"For gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty on 6 June 1944, in France. After two verbal requests to accompany the leading assault elements in the Normandy invasion had been denied, Brig. Gen. Roosevelt's written request for this mission was approved and he landed with the first wave of the forces assaulting the enemy-held beaches. He repeatedly led groups from the beach, over the seawall and established them inland. His valor, courage, and presence in the very front of the attack and his complete unconcern at being under heavy fire inspired the troops to heights of enthusiasm and self-sacrifice. Although the enemy had the beach under constant direct fire, Brig. Gen. Roosevelt moved from one locality to another, rallying men around him, directed and personally led them against the enemy. Under his seasoned, precise, calm, and unfaltering leadership, assault troops reduced beach strong points and rapidly moved inland with minimum casualties. He thus contributed substantially to the successful establishment of the beachhead in France."

~S~
 
FDR was a virtual corpse and would be dead in a month. His chosen successor timid Harry Truman would be held on the sidelines while FDR's socialist staff signed away everything to the Russians. Was that the plan? Investigations indicate that FDR's staff was riddled with communists.
 
America's greatness is not because of its leaders, but almost in spite of them.
 
So there is an overwhelming consensus among loony morons that the most popular President in American history, whose policies and leadership won a world war on three fronts and supplied a major fourth major front, winning it in about three years, was really bad n stuff. Got it. lol
 

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