This paper was delivered at the Mises Institute’s 2017 Austrian Economics Research Conference in Auburn, AL. Having devoted considerable time over the last forty years to studying the Great War, an interest that I developed in graduate school in the mid-1960s, I am no longer surprised or disappointed by fictional accounts of this conflict. In a forthcoming anthology, I try to explain why the glaringly obvious is so often neglected in most popular histories of the War. This is seen particularly in the attempt to attach overwhelming responsibility to the losing side while making the Allied governments look better than … Continue reading →
Source: Who’s To Blame for World War One? – LewRockwell
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