British thinker Bertrand Russell (1872 - 1970; Nobel Prize for Literature, 1950) used to get mighty hot under the collar when the topic of American society came up and this magazine article is just one example. On a speaking tour in the United States, the Cambridge Professor opined that
"love of truth [is] obscured in America by commercialism of which pragmatism is the philosophical expression; and love of our neighbor kept in fetters by Puritan morality."
He will have none of the thinking that America's main concern for jumping into the meat grinder of 1914-1918 was entirely inspired by "wounded France" and "poor little Belgium" but was rather an exercise in American self-interest. His greatest surprise was was revealed after the smoke had cleared and the bodies had been buried - it was the Americans who reigned supreme as the dominate power; click here to read that article...
From Amazon: The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell: The Final Years 1944-1969
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